Ripper's Revenge is a 2023 sequel to writer/director Steve Lawson (High Fliers Films/Creative Films)' 2021 Ripper Untold: an intense study that focuses on one of the former's supporting characters, Chris Bell's Sebastian Stubb, an unscrupulous, London Morning Times/Ripper reporter.
A year has passed since the last, Jack the Ripper slaying (the culprit revealed at the end of the initial chapter). This has left Stubb, who faked the Ripper letters, deflated and impoverished, living with his Whitechapel, lady-of-the-night girlfriend, Rachel Warren's Iris, to whom he can only promise better days.
One morning, as he's guiding a young, upstart reporter, Lenny (Rafe Bird), with "editorial" advice, he receives Ripper letter, but how can this be, if Stubb was the one who fabricated those prior? The red ink, the florid verbiage, is even rendered in Stubb's cutting style. And then as his luck would have it, more "Dear Boss" letters begin to materialize, as well as new murders.
As the story progresses, Iris' involvement with the possible, neo-Ripper becomes more evident, though is she being blackmailed or does she hold a true, compliant link? No matter the answer, Warren gives her character an air of desperate realism, and her chemistry with Bell/Stubb is never too mushy or strained. It feels right throughout, despite its harboring deceit.
That the movie presents Stubbs as a fated underdog builds the tale's momentum, in addition to structuring the events in such a way that Ripper Untold needn't be seen to appreciate the character's unfolding struggle. (I, for one, appreciate the idea of telling a tale from a so-called baddie's eyes, in order to reveal that the presumed villain isn't much of a villain, after all. Such was done in a 1980 episode of The Incredible Hulk, where fans saw from Jack McGee's perspective, and it change the series' landscape in a most positive way. I can say that the same applies in Ripper's Revenge's case, with Stubb still carrying his unsavory baggage, but also being humanized in way that would make his presence in Ripper Untold more interesting upon repeat viewings.)
On its right, Ripper's Revenge is both a satisfying mystery and an unsettling, slasher story, much of which is due to its commendable acting, Jon O'Neill's excellent photography, which mirrors that of the first film, and Lawson's fine, multilayered writing. Make it a double feature with Ripper Untold to instill an absorbing, dark experience.
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