The Vengeance of She is more of a plodding modern-day rerun with a third rate cast than a sequel - no Ursula Andress, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee or even Bernard Cribbins, with only John Richardson, the Clive Owen of his day (looks like a movie star, acts like a block of wood), returning (although at least Hammer were smart enough never to let him use his own voice: as usual, he's dubbed, here by David De Keyser), and no connection with any of H. Rider Haggard's three follow-up novels. This time it's the reincarnation of Ayesha being inexplicably drawn towards Kumar, with everyone who stands in her way meeting a rather boring death en route to a predictable appointment with the eternal flame. Unfortunately she's played by another one of Hammer's less than stellar discoveries, Olinka Berova. You can't exactly say that the lights are on but no-one's home because, in her case, she doesn't seem to have even bothered to turn the lights on. You know you're in trouble when Edward Judd is the most charismatic cast member, and this is pretty tedious factory line stuff no-one has any real need to see.
No extras and an indifferent transfer.