Gods Must Be Crazy II (1989)
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close  Gods Must Be Crazy II (1989)
Rated:  PG 
Starring: Lena Farugia, N!xau, Sandra Prinsloo, Hans Strydom, Marius Weyers.
Director: Jamie Uys
Genre: Action | Comedy
DVD Release Date: 02/03/2004

-- Part of a 2-Disc Set --

Two epic comedies of absurd proportions.

This delightful sequel to the hilarious hit comedy is a piece of divinely inspired lunacy! Xixo again collides with the so-called civilized world when he embarks on a search for his children, who are accidental stowaways on a poacher's truck.

He soon crosses paths with two very odd couples lost in the desert. Xixo, perplexed by their strange antics, nevertheless finds himself drawn into a crazy adventure with people who know how to make magic machines... but constantly need to be saved from the wilderness and from each other.

Cast Notes: I Marius Weyers (Andrew Steyn), Sandra Prinsloo (Kate Thompson), N!xau (Xixo), Louw Verwey (Sam Boga), Michael Thys (Mpudi), Nic De Jager (Jack Hind), Fanyana H. Sidumo (Card 1), Joe Seakatsie (Card 2), Brian O'Shaughnessy (Mr. Thompson), Vera Blacker (Mrs. Thompson), Ken Gampu (President), Paddy O'Byrne (Narrator), Jamie Uys (The Reverend).

Cast Notes: II N!xau (Xixo), Lena Farugia (Dr. Ann Taylor), Hans Strydom (Dr. Stephen Marshall), Nadies (Xisa), Eiros (Xiri), Richard Loring (Jack), Paddy O'Byrne (Narrator).

User Comment: jhaggardjr Chicago, Illinois • Crazy, goofy, and silly are the three most operative words to describe "The Gods Must Be Crazy". But the movie is also very original. It's appropriate that the word crazy is in the title because this is the craziest movie I've ever seen. "The Gods Must Be Crazy" is a South African made comedy that was made back in the early 1980s but didn't get released until 3-4 years after shooting was completed. It became a surprise hit in the U.S. after it was released in 1984, and it did very well in other countries too. "The Gods Must Be Crazy" features three separate stories that get tied together towards the end. One story is about a bushman who goes on a journey to return a Coke bottle that he found to the Gods after the bottle starts causing harm to some of his family members. Another story revolves around a war that breaks out in Central Africa. And the other story centers around a clumsy scientist who tries to take a pretty South African woman to her new job as a schoolteacher in a small African village, and does everything wrong. This is my favorite part of the movie. The scientist is played by Marius Weyers, and he gives an inspired slapstick comedy performance. Some of the things that he does in the film had me exploding in laughter. The scenes with the jeep that he drives are priceless. Sandra Prinsloo is a good foil as the schoolteacher who unfortuneitly has no choice but to put up with his clumsiness. When Weyers and Prinsloo are on screen, "The Gods Must Be Crazy" is at its funniest. The other two stories are good, but not great. Nevertheless, there are some unusual scenes in these parts of the movie too. But the scenes involving the scientist and the schoolteacher are the best parts of "The Gods Must Be Crazy". It's too bad that they didn't turn up in the dull sequel. I think these parts of the movie alone is enough for me to recommend "The Gods Must Be Crazy".

Summary: Crazy! Goofy! Silly!

IMDb Rating (10/17/07): 6.1/10 from 2,431 users

Additional information
Copyright:  1989,  Columbia / TriStar
Features:  • Featurette "Buster Reynolds Remembers Jamie Uys"
• Weblink to the Kalahari People's Fund
• Bonus Trailers
Subtitles:  English, Spanish, French, Japanese, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Thai
Video:  Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic-16x9)
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo [CC]
Time:  3:27
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  043396106499
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producer and Writer for both: Jamie Uys; Times 109 and 98 minutes; Total running time of 207 minutes; Packaging: Keep Case; Chapters: 56;

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