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5/19/2015

The Hangover Part II (2011) - Phillips & Co. follow their sensational comedy hit with a disappointing sequel



+ Most Undeserved Hit Movie of the Year

One of the persuasive posters that lured audiences by the thousands to Todd Phillips' The Hangover Part II


This time around, 'the wolf pack' are in Thailand, and at least I respect that the film does absolutely nothing to romanticize Bangkok.

Todd Phillips' (Starsky & Hutch (2004)) inevitable follow-up to his run-away comedy hit The Hangover (2009) is a schematic, thin rehash just barely worth the generous three stars it gets here.
Zach Galifianakis (Due Date (2010)) is the funniest character, and in good company the movie is just feasible, but ... there's many buts in the case of Hangover 2:
- Where was the much publicized Liam Neeson (Schindler's List (1993)) cameo? (The answer: On the cutting room floor, replaced by Nick Cassavetes (Face/Off (1997)) in a reshot version of the scene.)
- Why weren't there more funny comedians to lift the comedic level?
- Why did literally nothing new happen?
The action elements of Part II, which the first film didn't really have, only contribute in making the plot even more implausible. Add to this that Ken Jeong's (The DUFF (2015)) character Mr. Chow isn't fun anymore, and an offensive scene with violent monks, (other people will undoubtedly find other scenes from the film offensive.) - The Hangover Part II opened on Memorial Day, but that doesn't make it a memorable film by any standards.
It is co-written by Phillips, Craig Mazin (Scary Movie 3 (2003)) and Scot Armstrong (Semi-Pro (2008)), based on the characters created by Jon Lucas (21 & Over (2013)) and Scott Moore (Flypaper (2011)).
Phillips followed the film up with The Hangover Part III (2013), which finished the Hangover trilogy, and he is now working on a war-themed comedy titled Arms and the Dudes (2016).

Related posts:
 

2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III] 
2011 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2011 in films - according to Film Excess
 
Ken Jeong looks funny here, but he isn't very funny in Todd Phillips' The Hangover Part II


Watch the trailer for the film here

Cost: 80 mil. $
Box office: 586.8 mil. $
= Huge hit
[The movie, which started development two months before the first film was even released, opened to a whopping 86 mil. $ first weekend in North America and similarly red-hot reception globally. Audiences worldwide braved bad reviews and made the film the highest-grossing R-rated movie made to date: It made 254.4 mil. $ in North America (43 % of the total gross).]

What do you think of The Hangover Part II?
And the other two films in the trilogy?
And Phillips' other films?

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