As unoriginal and uninspired as the first Quarantine, its sequel drops all pretenses of trying to achieve anything other than SyFy-level effects and scares, without any of the effort of living up to the potential of the original Spanish horror film that it aimed to ape. Director John Pogue trades in the handheld news footage style of Rec and Quarantine for a more traditional, and less interesting, cinematic approach, thereby crafting a sequel that is even more unimaginative and characterless than its predecessor. Just take my word for it and watch anything else, surely you can find something on C-SPAN that is more exciting than Quarantine 2: Terminal.