Sunday 29 May 2011

Cinema Review - The Hangover Part Two

We're on sequel watch again and this time around it's the turn of The Hangover Part Two. The original, despite having a reasonably unknown cast at the time became one the breakout hits of 2009 and low and behold the demand arose and Todd Phillips created a sequel.


This time around the ante has been upped and we are invited to celebrate the crazy antics before Stu's (Ed Helms) wedding in Thailand. Opting for a celebratory brunch as opposed to a full blown Vegas-eque celebration, Stu hopes to avoid a repeat episode of their last pre-wedding nuptials.


How wrong he is. With a new recruit entered into the Wolfpack, Stu's future brother-in-law Teddy, the guys decide that one drink and some marshmallows by the fire can do no harm and all will be well.


The next morning... We find Phil (Bradley Cooper) waking up in a dirty, dingy hotel room in an unknown location. Wandering around the room trying to recollect events of the previous night he soons comes across a newly bald Alan (Zach Galifianakis) who also has no memory of the events. continuing into the bathroom Stu is soon discovered lying in the bath, with a Mike Tyson face tattoo on his face! This night clearly was as wild as Vegas.


The one problem the guys have, Teddy is missing and all they can find of him of his finger, prompting thoughts that he may well be dead, and so the chaos ensues....


Still looking for clues around the room, Phil calls previous newlywed Doug to find out where he is and it turns out he left the group early and retired to his room while the Wolfpack continued their late night adventure without him. And low and behold, the perpetrator of the continuation of the night is the one and only Mr Chow (Ken Jeong) continuing his reign of extremism and organised crime.


With an abundance of Chow and Bangkok thrown into the mix The Hangover Two succeeds in bringing to us yet another laugh-out-loud flick from Todd Phillips. Everything from penis jokes to the sheer hilarity of Galifianakis' Alan are showcased here in a hugely rib tickling 100 minutes of film time.


Despite the cameo from Liam Neeson being cut, a standout appearance from one Paul Giamatti helps to bring an extra special smile on the audience's face and, as you can expect, the bumper extra time spent with Mr Chow is filled with madcap moments and some over-exaggeration gangster style. 


All in all this sequel is successful in repeating the greatness of the first film, possibly falling just short in quality terms, but it is safe to say that you would be a fool not to expect a third and possibly final outing for the Wolfpack (maybe Alan's wedding?!)


Film rating: 3 out of 4 stars


The lowdown: One crazy night in Bangkok proves to be a mix of hilarity and some cringing in what could turn out to be the funniest film of 2011.

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