Julio (Pedro Fernández), wearer of Mexico's most magnificent mullet, does battle with the supernatural once again, this time at the studios of movie magnate Roberto Mondragón (Joaquín Cordero), where the ghost-themed birthday party for Roberto's youngest daughter Tania (Renata del Río) has been rudely crashed by an evil demon.
Directed by Pedro Galindo III, the same man who gave us trashy South American slasher Hell's Trap, Vacations of Terror 2 is typical late 80s/early 90s low-budget nonsense with the emphasis on fun rather than logic—one giant mess of random ideas loosely linked by the slightest of plots. Not one second of this film makes any sense, so my advice is to switch off the brain, chug on a few Cervezas, and be ready with those nachos 'cos this one's got cheese to spare!
With Tania's older sister Mayra (pop songstress Tatiana) being turned into a cake decoration, flaming pumpkin missiles, little Tania being pulled along the ground by unseen forces (or rather, on a skateboard attached to a wire), Mayra performing a crap pop song in its entirety (which, entitled 'Chicos, Chicos Chicos', bears an uncanny similarity to Sabrina's 'Boys Boys Boys'), a phone that squirts goop, and a creepy doll eating an icing witch before transforming into a pointy-eared rubber-nosed monster, this is, of course, utter garbage, but at least it is fairly entertaining garbage.