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My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2

(2016) * 1/2 Pg-13
94 min. Gold Circle Films. Director: Kirk Jones. Cast: Nia Vardalos, John Corbett, Michael Constantine, Louis Mandylor, Lainie Kazan, Andrea Martin, Mark Margolis, John Stamos, Rita Wilson, Joey Fatone.

/content/films/4897/1.jpgFull disclosure: having to sit through My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 is, essentially, my idea of hell on earth. But in watching the film at a preview screening this week, I found that much of the audience seemed to think it was the best thing since sliced baklava. While I really don’t begrudge anyone a good laugh, and it would be perverse to try to talk a person out of one, Nia Vardalos’ fourteen-years-later sequel doesn’t offer many “good” laughs. They’re mostly retrograde “aren’t ethnics funny?” laughs that would’ve felt more fitting in a movie fifty years ago than one from today.

First, some praise for Nia Vardalos, who wrote and starred in the 2002 romantic comedy based on her one-woman show. Then and now, Vardalos has created opportunities for herself (including the flop 2003 CBS sitcom spinoff My Big Fat Greek Life), and she’s not unappealing as the eye of Her Big Fat Greek Maelstrom. But that maelstrom: the outlandish stereotypes, shameless mugging (and vigorously trilled “r”s), cheap references (the Parthenon, feta cheese, opa!), and broad staging (including how the family lives in what looks like a Greek theme park dropped in the suburbs). It’s all as warm and fuzzy and comforting (or not) as a Disney Channel show marketed more to parents than to their kids.

It’s the joke that this Greek family is obnoxious, but the joke itself is obnoxious. So it’s laughable when Vardalos pens a scene in which Toula berates a trio of jealous “Anglo” neighbors for standing in her driveway and laughing at her “weird” family. In context, the scene makes sense, but it’s all too easy to take one step back and see that Vardalos is doing something that’s perhaps worse: selling out her heritage and turning her family into cartoons to make monster profits off of cheap laughs.

Anyway, fans of the original have a good chance of warming to the sequel, which brings back marrieds Toula (Vardalos) and Ian (John Corbett) and her gaggle of extended-familial meddlers: mom Maria (Lainie Kazan), dad Gus (Michael Constantine), Aunt Voula (Andrea Martin), et al (Louis Mandylor, Joey Fatone, Mark Margolis...). Toula and Ian now have a seventeen-year-old daughter (Arielle Sugarman) to absorb the pressure to couple with a nice Greek boy, but she’s not the blushing bride of this sequel’s wedding. That honor goes to Maria, prompting a theme of neglected marriages in need of refreshing: yep, even Toula and Ian need to rekindle their flame, even as they fret about their daughter flying the coop to college.

So if My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 doesn’t exactly have zero urgency, it’s fair to say it suffers from slack stakes as well as total predictability. Vardalos ticks off set pieces—date night, hairdressing session with the gals, prom, wedding—as director Kirk Jones alternates between a daffy and a sappy tone, with faux-Greek music or twinkly orchestration to tell us what to feel. Jones turns up the bright lights and positions the camera to catch every gaudy sitcomedic gag, but there’s no inspiration here as Vardalos reprises running jokes from the 2002 film, which had the benefit at least of offering a fresh point of view, for Zeus’s sake (see, it’s easy!).

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Bluray

Aspect ratios: 2.39:1

Number of discs: 1

Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1

Street date: 6/21/2016

Distributor: Universal Studios Home Entertaiment


Universal sends My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 home in a Blu-ray + DVD + Digital HD special edition that offers excellent A/V and plump if not fat bonus features. The digital-to-digital picture is the sort of bright and colorful transfer we've come to expect of modern comedies. There's a bright, tight sheen to the image, which doesn't exactly pop but has all the right moves in terms of a foundational black level, detail and texture, and little in the way of noise, adding up to a clean and stable image. The lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 mix won't challenge anyone's home theater: it's all about the dialogue, which is clear and up front, as with most of the music and effects. Prioritization of dialogue is good, and occasionally there's some ambience with crowd scenes and a bit of excitement in the farcical climax.

Bonus features kick off with a "Gag Reel" (4:05, HD) featuring the flubbing of everyone's favorite Greek family. We also get two fairly substantial featurettes: the cast roundtable "My Big Fat Greek Dinner" (14:34, HD) with Nia Vardalos, John Corbett, Louis Mandylor, Joey Fatone, and, later, Ian Gomez, Lainie Kazan, and Michael Constantine talking about the original film, this sequel, and the potential for (oh no!) a third entry in the series; and the behind-the-scenes look "Making the Greekquel" (11:40, HD), which hones in on the work of Vardalos and director Kirk Jones, as well as the filming of the wedding scene. It's enough to satisfy fans, while leaving room for a potential double-dip reissue to milkthe fanbase.


 

Review gear:
Panasonic Viera TC-P55VT30 55" Plasma 1080p 3D HDTV
Oppo BDP-93 Universal Network 3D Blu-ray Disc Player
Denon AVR2112CI Integrated Network A/V Surround Receiver
Pioneer SP-BS41-LR Bookshelf Speaker (2)
Pioneer SP-C21 Center Speaker
Pioneer SW-8 Subwoofer

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