Jump to content

Beethoven's 2nd (film): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by 108.17.102.18 (talk) to last version by ClueBot NG
No edit summary
Line 21: Line 21:
}}
}}


'''''Beethoven's 2nd''''' is a 1993 American [[family film]] directed by [[Rod Daniel]], and the first [[sequel]] to the 1992 film, ''[[Beethoven (film)|Beethoven]]''. It starred [[Charles Grodin]] and [[Bonnie Hunt]], and Beethoven's four puppies, Chubby, Dolly, Tchaikovsky, and Moe. This is the second of six installments in the [[Beethoven film series|''Beethoven'' film series]]. Initially, no theatrical sequel to ''Beethoven'' was planned, but ''Beethoven's 2nd'' was produced after the unexpected financial success of the film.
'''''Beethoven's 2nd''''' is a 1993 American [[family film]] directed by [[Rod Daniel]], and the first [[sequel]] to the 1992 film, ''[[Beethoven (film)|Beethoven]]''. It starred [[Charles Grodin]] and [[Bonnie Hunt]], and Beethoven's four puppies, Chubby, Dolly, Tchaikovsky, and Moe. This is the second of six installments in the [[Beethoven (film series)|''Beethoven'' film series]]. Initially, no theatrical sequel to ''Beethoven'' was planned, but ''Beethoven's 2nd'' was produced after the unexpected financial success of the film.


==Plot==
==Plot==

Revision as of 10:44, 2 January 2012

Beethoven's 2nd
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRod Daniel
Written byLen Blum
Produced byMichael C. Gross
Joe Medjuck
StarringCharles Grodin
Bonnie Hunt
Nicholle Tom
Christopher Castile
Sarah Rose Karr
Debi Mazar
Chris Penn
CinematographyBill Butler
Edited byWilliam D. Gordean
Sheldon Kahn
Music byRandy Edelman
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • December 17, 1993 (1993-12-17)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film US
LanguageEnglish
Box office$118,243,066

Beethoven's 2nd is a 1993 American family film directed by Rod Daniel, and the first sequel to the 1992 film, Beethoven. It starred Charles Grodin and Bonnie Hunt, and Beethoven's four puppies, Chubby, Dolly, Tchaikovsky, and Moe. This is the second of six installments in the Beethoven film series. Initially, no theatrical sequel to Beethoven was planned, but Beethoven's 2nd was produced after the unexpected financial success of the film.

Plot

The film begins in the home of the Newtons, where George, Alice, their three children, and Beethoven are all well adjusted to living together. Early on, Beethoven meets Missy, a female St. Bernard whose owners are attempting to settle a divorce. Regina, who is seeking $50,000 in the settlement, has retained full custody of Missy, planning to transfer her to Brillo, her soon to be ex-husband, once the divorce is finalized. With Beethoven's help, Missy escapes from Regina's condo and the St. Bernards fall in love. Missy has four puppies who are discovered at the same time by Regina and two of the Newton children. Regina reclaims Missy and, angry about the puppies, plans to get rid of them even if it means killing them. The janitor who first found Missy and the puppies suggested that Regina might be able to sell the puppies and make a lot of money. Thinking Regina plans to drown the puppies, Ted and Emily carry them home in a box and hide them from George, who they do not think wants four puppies to deal with. Angered by the puppies' disappearance, Regina plans revenge. The three children, Ryce, Ted, and Emily, take it upon themselves to feed and care for the puppies, even getting up in the middle of the night and sneaking out of school to do so.

Eventually, George and Alice discover the puppies; George, angry at first, reluctantly agrees to keep the puppies until they are mature. At this point, the puppies are presumably 8–10 weeks old, the children give them names, and George re-experiences the ordeals of dealing with growing dogs. Facing significant financial difficulty, the family is offered a free stay in a lakefront house owned by one of George's business associates. Beethoven and the puppies, somewhat calmed down, go along on the family vacation. Ryce attends a party with friends where she is exposed to vices of teen culture such as binge drinking and getting locked in her former boyfriend's bedroom against her will. Beethoven tears the house apart, removing Ryce from potential danger.

Regina and her new boyfriend, Floyd, are staying in a location unknown to Brillo, coincidentally near the Newtons' vacation residence. The Newtons go to a county fair with their dogs and the children persuade George to enter a burger eating contest with Beethoven. George and Beethoven win, much to the disappointment of the crowd. By happenstance, Regina and Floyd were at the fair and had left Missy behind in their car. Missy escapes from the car with Beethoven's help while Regina sneaks up behind the children and snatches the four puppies from them. Beethoven and Missy run into the wilderness, followed by Regina and Floyd. The Newtons follow, eventually catching up with Regina, Floyd, Beethoven, Missy, and the puppies. Floyd threatens to drop the puppies in the river below and George says the situation does not have to get ugly. Floyd pokes George in the chest with a stick, but Beethoven charges into the stick, ramming it into Floyd's crotch. He loses his balance, Regina grabs his hand, and they fall over the cliff into a pool of mud, which breaks, thus being swept away in the river.

Five months later, Brillo visits the Newtons with Missy, revealing that the judge in the divorce had granted him full custody of her and awarded nothing to Regina after throwing her claim out. The puppies, almost full grown by then, run downstairs to see Missy as the film ends.

Cast

Christopher Masterson had a small role in the film. However, his older brother, Danny Masterson, had a leading role in the film. The two were not playing brothers in the film so neither one mentioned to anyone that they were related. When producers went to view the film, they noticed the resemblance and reshot all of Chris's scenes with another actor.[citation needed]

Production

The film's park scenes were filmed in Montana at Glacier National Park, though only California was specified as the location in the film. The house used as the Newton family home is located on Milan Avenue, South Pasadena.[1]

Song

The theme song, "The Day I Fall in Love", performed by Dolly Parton and James Ingram, was nominated for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, and a Grammy Award for Best Song from a Motion Picture.

Reception

The movie gained a mixed response.[2] It grossed more than $118 million at the box office worldwide.

References

  1. ^ http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2009/09/17/the-beethoven-house/
  2. ^ "MOVIE REVIEW : 'Beethoven' Scores Again With Comedy". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-06-06.