Release Date :
July 2, 2003.
Starring : Luke Wilson, Reese Witherspoon,Bob Newhart, Regina
King, Sally Field.
Type : Comedy
Direction : Charles Herman-Wurmfeld.
Writer : Dennis Drake, Eve Ahlert, Kate Kondell.
Producer : David Nicksay, Marc E. Platt, Reese Witherspoon.
Distribution : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).
Duration :.
Legally Blonde 2 Details
Omigod, there's another "Legally Blonde" movie! The first "Blonde" went
over like 24-hour valet parking on Rodeo Drive, earning nearly $100
million for its delightfully daffy saga of Elle Woods (Reese
Witherspoon), a sunshine-kissed Beverly Hills girl who conquered Harvard
Law School in perfectly coordinated pink ensembles. It was never a
question of if there'd be a sequel, just when. And could. Could anything
be more lighter-than-air than the first "Blonde"? More improbable in
terms of plot, pacing and pooch couture for Elle's beloved Chihuahua,
Bruiser? Yes. Oh my, yes. And . . . so what? Clocking in at a mere 94
minutes, "Legally Blonde 2" is too fast, too furiously packed with "Omigod,
I can't believe she just said that [and that I laughed]"-type lines to
do anything but sit back and enjoy it. There are occasional misfires,
like a forced running gag about a "Snap Cup" and a creepy rap sequence
with Congressional interns down on all-fours. Nor are there any special
effects, unless you count Bruiser's outfits. Still, unlike a lot of big
summer movies,"Blonde 2" is fun. If not quite as "superfun!" (quoth
Elle) as its predecessor, it's only because we've been here before. We
already saw the fish-out-of-Evian scenario in the first "Legally
Blonde." This time around, Elle's swimming with the sharks in
Washington, D.C., although -- always the cockeyelinered optimist -- she
has no idea how nasty things will get when she pops in for her first day
of work at Congresswoman Rudd's (Sally Field) office. "Hello, patriots!"
Elle trills from beneath her pink pillbox hat. "Oh my God," one Rudd
staffer snarls. "It's Capitol Barbie." "She's so . . . shiny," another
mocks. Shiny, yes. But always with a cause. Last time it was getting
into Harvard, where she overcame fierce anti-blonde prejudice to win a
big murder trial and a hunky lawyer's heart. This time around, product
testing on animals has got her goat. Now planning her wedding to Emmett
(Luke Wilson, back and still looking blank for the sequel), Elle
abruptly moves to D.C. to push for a bill banning the practice. You see,
the private investigator she's hired to find Bruiser's "biological"
mother has led her to a row of dogs trapped in cages at a cosmetics
company. What, you think that's silly? Of course it is. All of it!
Though no more silly, perhaps, than watching the real Congress fawn over
shiny movie stars "testifying" about some cause that's the subject of
their latest script. Meanwhile, Elle seems anything but stupid as she
advances her bill through a combination of newly-acquired Capitol Hill
street smarts (helped by Bob Newhart's deadpan doorman) and her own
unique understanding of human makeup. Who else but Elle could recognize
Rep. Rudd's facial for what it really is -- a political coverup! "I
can't do anyone any good if I'm not here," Rudd smarmily tries to
explain away her actions. "But you're not doing anyone any good here,"
Elle responds sadly. It all makes so much sense, you wonder why no one's
ever said it before in a movie. At least not so Elle-oquently. Even
Jimmy Stewart's earnest Mr. Smith lacked her loopily logical
sensibility, and while it's almost impossible to imagine any actress but
Witherspoon pulling it off so adroitly, it's easy to understand her
character's appeal, particularly to women. Elle Woods is non-judgmental
and smart on her own terms. She always expects the best of people,
including herself. Through her, we see it's inner beauty that really
counts. Especially if you've got the shoes and hat to match.