Miss this stale, non-congenial sequel
PEGGY J. ROGERS
Movie sequels fall somewhere between being as good or better than the
original, like “Godfather II,” or being like a weekly episodic
television show with the same characters dealing with the same
situation, but with additional supporting actors and different
locations, like “Lethal Weapon 2,” “3” and “4.”
Both types of sequels have had their share of box office hits and
misses. Churning out sequels, however, is obviously a gamble film
producers are eager to make, including Sandra Bullock.
Bullock stars and produces in the sequel to her box office hit
comedy, “Miss Congeniality.” The sequel, “Miss Congeniality 2: Armed
and Fabulous,” has a title that fits the original story but falls
short of being related to anything in the second installment.
Picking up where the last movie left of, Gracie Hart has become
the media diva of the moment since solving the Miss U.S. murder while
being runner-up in the contest. Gracie is such a recognizable public
figure now, her fans gush over her frantically asking for autographs,
even when she is on undercover assignment.
This means Gracie draws too much attention to her while undercover
and is taken out of the field and groomed to be the poster girl for
the FBI, traveling across the country promoting the bureau as well as
her newly released book about her beauty pageant adventures.
Back at FBI headquarters a new agent, Sam Fuller (Regina King),
struggles with anger management issues in self-defense class. The
solution is to send Sam along as a bodyguard on Gracie’s
cross-country television tour. The assignment, naturally, makes Sam
angry.
Before Gracie or her traveling entourage get to the source of
Sam’s anger, friends of hers from the Miss U.S. pageant are kidnapped
and held for ransom. Never one to delegate, Gracie drops her book
tour and races across the country to Las Vegas to try to solve the
crime. Gracie’s bodyguard reluctantly tags along.
The kidnapping, however, is a smoke screen for what is most
important in the film: friendships.
“Miss Congeniality 2” is a female version of the cops-and-buddies
comedy drama “Lethal Weapon,” with script problems. Bad acting can
turn a great story into a boring one. However, even great actors
cannot turn a weak story into a hit. In movies, the story is
everything. Sandra Bullock and her co-star, Regina King (“Ray”) are
good actors and good at doing comedy. Good comedy.
The comedy in “Miss Congeniality 2,” however, has been done in so
many other comedies, including classics such as “Some Like It Hot”
and the contemporary multi-character-driven comedies of Eddie Murphy
and Martin Lawrence.
Some of the routines have been used so often they make you wince
with remorse, like when Gracie Hart runs after and knocks down
someone posing as a famous celebrity that turns out to actually be
the celebrity. Another embarrassing skit finds Gracie disguised as a
cantankerous senior in an adult-care facility, complete with sagging
breasts and gigantic false teeth. It is an outdated stereotype, one
that was popular a couple of decades back; that is when it was funny.
Homosexual and drag queen innuendos and nightclub performances also
appearing in the comedy have grown stale with time.
What is newer to film but usually reserved for an action movie is
the slapping, hitting and choking antics Gracie and Sam get into that
are meant to be taken as slapstick humor on the level of the Three
Stooges. Some viewers may find the behavior offensive or, at the very
least, not funny.
The film’s greatest strength is its actors, Bullock and King. The
sequel’s most obvious weakness is its disjointed, seen-it-all-before
script.
The comedy has greater appeal to teenagers with limited movie
experience. For adults, the sequel falls closer to being a weekly
episodic comedy show than being as good as or better than the
original, so watching it on television, on DVD or on pay-per-view
could improve your viewing pleasure.
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