Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, The (2015) [Blu-ray]
Comedy | Drama
Check in again for more love and laughter as new arrival Richard Gere joins an all-star ensemble cast - including Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Bill Nighy and Dev Patel - returning for this heartwarming sequel to The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel! Now that his
first venture has been proven successful, ever-confident Sonny (Patel) is busy juggling plans for a second resort... as well as his own wedding. But his efforts are constantly hampered by hilarious complications, and in order to pull it all together,
he'll need a little help and encouragement from his resident friends.
Storyline: The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is the expansionist dream of Sonny (Dev Patel), and it's making more claims on his time than he has available, considering his imminent marriage to the love of his life, Sunaina
(Tina Desai). Sonny has his eye on a promising property now that his first venture, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel for the Elderly and Beautiful, has only a single remaining vacancy - posing a rooming predicament for fresh arrivals Guy (Richard Gere) and
Lavinia (Tamsin Greig). Evelyn and Douglas (Judi Dench and Bill Nighy) have now joined the Jaipur workforce, and are wondering where their regular dates for Chilla pancakes will lead, while Norman and Carol (Ronald Pickup and Diana Hardcastle) are
negotiating the tricky waters of an exclusive relationship, as Madge (Celia Imrie) juggles two eligible and very wealthy suitors. Perhaps the only one who may know the answers is newly installed co-manager of the hotel, Muriel (Maggie Smith), the keeper
of everyone's secrets. As ... Written by Fox Searchlight
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, July 15, 2015 -- Old age ain't for sissies.
It might hit you when you're 40, or more likely when you pass that half a century mark, but there will come a time when your mortality ceases to be quite as abstract as you might wish it would be. Along with the typical vagaries of age, you
know, things like all those aches and pains your parents or grandparents used to bore you to tears with when you were young, is the dawning awareness that you may indeed be living on borrowed time, and that that figurative countdown clock could reach
"zero" at any given moment. That rather melancholic idea provided quite a bit of the emotional subtext of The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, and it continues to inform the winning if hardly revelatory The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, a
film which coasts rather amiably on the combined star wattage of its iconic cast. In a scene that seems to exist only for its scenery, Sonny Kapoor (Dev Patel) is driving Muriel Donnelly (Maggie Smith) to San Diego on Route 66, in a convertible, no
less (did they drive from New York? from India?). Muriel is of course less than thrilled with the ride, but she's quite adamant that she remain in charge once the pair reaches their destination, a tony hotel run by a huge corporation called
Evergreen (those with a low tolerance for obvious symbolism may be permitted a quick roll of the eyes at this point). It turns out Sonny and Muriel are there to pitch the idea of (yep, you guessed it) a second hotel in Jaipur which would cater to
elders, since the original hotel is at its occupancy limit. Entrepreneur Ty Burley (David Straitharn) is suitably intrigued, and it seems like there may be a deal in the offing, though Burley makes it clear he wants one of his chosen acolytes to travel to
India to inspect the original facility. In the meantime, Sonny, now over the moon with the prospect of veritable piles of cold, hard cash falling into his hands, video conferences with his fiancée Sunaina (Tina Desai), informing her it's finally
time to complete their wedding plans (and, obviously, the wedding itself). A small wrench is thrown into the proceedings when it turns out Sonny's old nemesis Kusah (Shazad Latif) has reentered the picture, ostensibly to help Sunaina choreograph the all
important wedding dance.
While that very wedding gives The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel at least a bit of a through line, this follow up film is probably even more vignette driven than the first entry was. That's not necessarily a bad thing, mind you, for it
gives each of the rather large featured cast his or her own moment to shine, but it also tends to give the film something of a patchwork quilt quality, something that it struggles fitfully (and mostly unsuccessfully) to overcome. As with that first entry,
the sequel doesn't really shy away from tugging rather forcefully at the heartstrings on several occasions, something that only adds to the rather (and perhaps unavoidably) elegiac tone of the entire piece.
The faltering relationship between Douglas Ainslie (Bill Nighy) and Evelyn Greenslade (Judi Dench) plays out in largely predictable fashion, though Evelyn at least has the offer of a real, bonafide career to contend with, something that both excites and
terrifies her. Douglas has his own issues to contend with when estranged wife Jean (Penelope Wilton) shows up with their daughter in tow. Somewhat less effective is a silly subplot involving Norman Cousins (Ronald Pickup), the would be lothario who is
currently bedding Carol Parr (Diana Hardcastle). When a rather drunken Norman hands over a huge wad of cash to a taxi driver one night after having discussed how he'd like Carol to "disappear," some resultant "accidents" cause Norman to believe he's
inadvertently placed a hit on his lover's life.
The "newcomer" this time around is one Guy Chambers (Richard Gere, the veritable "kid" of the older cast), who shows up and is immediately pegged by Sonny as the undercover spy that Burley has sent to check out the hotel. That plot point never
really pays any sufficient dividends, despite a twist or two, and instead it's Guy's rather sweet wooing of Sonny's mom, Mrs. Kapoor (Lillette Dubey), that tends to resonate more effectively (Mrs. Kapoor's "lack" of a first name is played for fitful
laughs). Also in the romance game is Madge Hardcastle (Celia Imrie), who is involved in something of a cross-cultural ménage à trois. Finally, Muriel's health issues offer Maggie Smith a field day for her patented steely and thorny persona which
only partially masks what is obviously a heart of gold.
While there's nothing very earth shattering in The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, the film is effortlessly entertaining and packs some surprising emotional wallop, especially for those who are watching that aforementioned countdown clock
themselves (and who would be expected to be this film's "natural" demographic). There's a sweetness to a lot of the interactions here, and a rather beautiful wisdom imparted that many of these characters may in fact be nearing the end of the line,
but haven't reached it yet—so why not dance, Bollywood style?
Though my teenage sons delight in (repeatedly) reminding me of what a geezer I am, I'm probably not quite at the point of wistful old age that the characters in this film are, but for you young 'uns out there, don't judge this book by its somewhat
wrinkled cover. The Second Best Marigold Hotel may have been marketed to the AARP crowd, but it's colorful, bright and at times surprisingly moving, certainly attributes which should appeal to a broader demographic. Technical merits are first rate,
and The Second Best Marigold Hotel comes Recommended.
[CSW] -3.0- While I appreciate the performances in the film and always love Dench, Nighy, and Maggie Smith, the film was underwhelming. The story was muddled and the ending was non-existent. Not as good as the first film.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
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