Ever been to a wedding where you donβt know anyone very well? Itβs pretty deadly, no matter how good the food or the band might be. Everyoneβs laughing really hard at jokes you donβt find funny, or even understand.
On the other hand, if you know and love everyone, youβll have fun even if the champagne is flat and the canapes soggy.
And that, dear moviegoer, is about as deep as we need to go in analyzing βMy Big Fat Greek Wedding 2,β an overstuffed, under-achieving sequel that took more than a decade to come to the screen. If youβve been dying for a reunion with those aggressively lovable folks known as the Portokalos family, maybe youβll be happy. But if you didnβt miss them that much or, maybe didnβt even know them in the first place, stay away from this wedding. Send a gift and call it a day.
The fact that the film took 14 years to arrive βNia Vardalos is again the star and writer β is both a blessing and a curse. It may have stoked huge interest β the original was a ginormous sleeper hit β but it also implies that weβre about to see something worth the wait. Instead, the script is a tired pastiche of what seem like the same gags we heard the first time. Greek families are big and affectionate! Greek families get involved in each otherβs business! Greek families smother you with love! And so on.
We begin in snowy Chicago, where Toula (Vardalos) is still married to her Waspy hunk of a husband, Ian (John Corbett, amiable but peripheral), now the high school principal. Her father, Gus (Michael Constantine), is still very much the patriarch, a man who swears heβs related to Alexander the Great and believes that every word in the English language comes from Greek, even βFacebook.β The rest of the gang is back, too, including Lainie Kazan as Toulaβs mom, Maria, and the terrific Andrea Martin as Aunt Voula, who still likes to talk raunchy.
But 14 years HAVE passed; Toula and Ian are now parents of a high school senior, pretty Paris (Elena Kampouris), whoβs aching to spread her wings. Paris rolls her mascara-heavy eyes when her grandfather, on the way to school, instructs her to quickly find a Greek boy and marry him.
Such grandfatherly advice is par for the course, but poor Paris really suffers when this theme is stretched to ridiculous proportions as the entire clan β cousins, aunts, uncles β shows up at the schoolβs college fair, where they virtually accost the representative from Northwestern and threaten him with punishment should Paris not be admitted. Oh, families. So silly.
This is a recurring problem with the film, directed by Kirk Jones; what seemed quirky and funny in the original is exaggerated to un-funny extent here. Itβs as if Vardalos was trying to take things to a darker, more interesting place, but at every such turn, got scared and went for slapstick humor instead.
And so we have an extended scene in which Gus gets stuck, naked, in his bathtub, and the entire family comes to extract him. But they have to cover his private parts with a towel! And thatβs about the extent of the joke!
But OK, given the title, thereβs got to be β¦ a wedding, right? Well, Toulaβs already married, and Paris is too young. And so, we have a plot device whereby Gus discovers that his original marriage license from Greece was never signed.
Time for a wedding! More importantly, time for a wedding-dress shopping montage! Because thatβs what every movie in the history of cinema has done when a woman needs a wedding dress!
Of course, there are a few obstacles along the way. But we all know that weβll get our happy wedding, some way, somehow. And youβll surely smile at a few points β whoβs not a sucker for a big wedding, right?
Itβs only when those credits roll that youβll likely find yourself thinking: 14 years, for this?
βMy Big Fat Greek Wedding 2,β a Universal Studios release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America βfor some suggestive material.β Running time: 94 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.
MPAA definition of PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.
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