Neighbors
2 is essentially the same as Neighbors
(2014), except that gender stereotypes are even more pronounced, although the
filmmakers try to promote women and gays in a more positive light toward the
end, as if to make up for earlier scenes.
In earlier scenes women are shown as giggly, squeaking, sobbing
uncontrollably at a sad show on television, and on and on. They’re depicted as dumb (e.g., not
knowing what ‘escrow’ is, not recognizing the implication of water breaking in
a pregnancy, and immediately accepting of a man who appears authoritative to
them and promises rescue). Note
that all the writers are male, so expect this to be a male fantasy with a few
curbs just to be politically correct.
Granted, men are portrayed as dumb and bumbling
too (clueless about parenting, unable to pull off a heist) and prejudiced
against gay men, but they’re also the ones with ideas and computational abilities. Actually, the film for the most part is
accepting of gays by portraying them more or less realistically. I wish they had been as open-minded
toward women.
The first Neighbors
chronicled the trauma of a young couple with a baby who is unlucky enough to
have a fraternity move in next door (loud partying, mainly). Things got partially resolved, and now
that the couple is expecting another child, they want to sell their house and
move somewhere else. The problem
is that just when they are getting close to finalizing the sale, a sorority
moves in next door, which makes matters worse (Dontcha know—women are always
worse than men!).
What follows is the same kind of one-upmanship
that we saw in the first Neighbors,
with ridiculous ideas turning slapstick bad. The only time I really laughed was when a young person not
knowing about landlines pulled the “old people’s” phone off the wall, not
realizing it was attached.
Neighbors
2 is an excellent example of a film not needing a sequel, but filmmakers
see the $$$ and do it anyway. They
recycle the same plot and jokes trying to refit it to be more politically
correct (although they still don’t seem to be aware that the word “frat” is not
really accepted in Greek communities at universities). I didn’t hear too many laughs in the
screening I attended with around 200 people. Maybe it’s not so funny after all?
The not-funny-again sequel to the 2014 Neighbors.
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