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Anna Chlumsky and Austin O'Brien in My Girl 2 - Meine große Liebe (1994)

Benutzerrezensionen

My Girl 2 - Meine große Liebe

57 Bewertungen
6/10

Good but not great

I love My Girl, it is very charming and poignant, and as far as sequels go, My Girl 2 is good but not great. It is disappointing compared to My Girl, but it was decent and could have been a lot worse. The script does fall into cheese occasionally, the story is predictable, some of the direction lacks tightness and the pace is dull in the middle.

However, My Girl 2 is beautiful to watch with lovely scenery and pleasant photography, and the soundtrack is pleasant on the ears. The acting also helps, Anna Chlumsky broke my heart in My Girl and she is just as charming and poignant. Austin O'Brien shows an able chemistry with her, and Jamie Lee Curtis and Dan Aykroyd are also solid. The film also has an atmosphere that keeps true to My Girl, making some scenes that strived to be heart-breaking genuinely so.

Overall, it wasn't a great movie like the first My Girl but I liked it for the performances. 6/10 Bethany Cox
  • TheLittleSongbird
  • 11. März 2011
  • Permalink
6/10

Better as a standalone film, pretty pointless as a sequel.

Well, I certainly enjoyed its predecessor. The previous film had a simple story, but it was more character driven rather than a plot oriented film. That was the reason the audience were left heartbroken at the sudden death of a major character.

The story continues as Shelly is pregnant and Vada realizes that she barely knows her late mother. Thus, she decides to leave for LA to get to know more of her mother.

My Girl, focused more upon how Vada grew up in an funeral home with death all around and how she matured. It was a story about growing up. I liked the mystery around the character of her mother and wasn't much curious as to how she actually was. Whereas, this is completely different. It is more of a plot driven story, an adventure as one might say, with little to no character development. For me at least, I think this movie destroys the characters created in the previous film. Vada is now mature, but it was her innocence which made me love the previous film. So it is a pointless sequel i'd say. My Girl should have been left alone.

On the other hand if you look at it as a standalone film i.e. no connection with the previous film, it is actually a good film. If someone sees this film before the previous one, they might like it.

Direction: Weak.

Script/Story: Average.

Acting: Anna is mature, and has acted just fine. Austin is average. Rest of the cast is good.

Music: Good, refreshing.

A weak and unnecessary sequel.
  • A_Voice
  • 7. Dez. 2013
  • Permalink
5/10

Contrived and timid

  • n-mo
  • 3. Jan. 2013
  • Permalink

One of my favorites.

Yes, I know "My Girl 2" was a sequel. Yes, I know it is hard to follow the first movie. But the reason why I love this movie is because of the way we see Vada Sultenfuss has changed over the course of a few years. I loved seeing the sweet, innocent Vada become more of an adult & still remain likeable as a character. I also love Austin O'Brien in this movie; to date, he has not been in anything memorable, but I think the role of Nick was suited for him. I do find the relationship they have somewhat disenchanting, but it was what I was waiting for the whole movie. I think the plot was an interesting one, and Maggie Muldovan made this movie. It is, as another reviewer remarked, worth it to watch the movie countless times just to hear her sing "Smile." I love all of this movie, though, so I would advise seeing it.
  • silvergirl1385
  • 21. Apr. 2000
  • Permalink
1/10

Just pointless

  • Andy-411
  • 17. Apr. 2000
  • Permalink
5/10

My Girl, same as she ever was...

What does Vada learn about herself in this second installment, is the important question... ? In the first movie, she learns how to let someone go, and to not be so freaked out by death. In this, she learns about her mother, goes back home, but she hasn't changed much as a person. Practically zero character development, which is poor when she's the main character to build the plot of your whole movie around.

It was nice to see her again because she's a warm screen personality and Chlumsky performs her well, but this adventure doesn't build on anything that went before it, so we're left to wonder what purpose the story has except as a blatant attempt to make more money.
  • Howlin Wolf
  • 3. Aug. 2011
  • Permalink
3/10

My Girl 2

  • jboothmillard
  • 6. Juni 2011
  • Permalink
7/10

I really liked this movie

I don't know what to say: i just really liked this movie. I even cried :-o Maybe I am just cheesie or too romantic, but what the heck.... In my eyes, the main storyline is not the search for the mother, but the discovery of those first loving feelings, the changing of the body, the transformation from childhood to adolescence, in short: it is a story about growing up. Something we all have gone through....its such a "feeling good" film: all people are friendly, there are no sorrows...

It gets a 7/10 (which is a lot coming from me, believe me)
  • The_Cobra
  • 22. Aug. 2002
  • Permalink
2/10

Significant and cringe-worthy disappointment

  • if_your_a_bird_im_a_bird
  • 13. Apr. 2008
  • Permalink
7/10

The sequel's just as good as the original

The original "My Girl" from 1991 was a quality drama about a 10 year-old girl experiencing tragic death. In "My Girl 2" she's now 13 and goes to Southern California to learn about her mother she never knew. Her companion is played by Austin O'Brien. Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis play her father and stepmother while Richard Masur and Christine Ebersole co-star as her uncle and potential aunt. The beautiful Angeline Ball has a small role as her mother in flashbacks.

This is just a solid drama, as good or better than the original. The adventures of the two 13 year-olds as they go from person to person searching for information about Vada's mother compels the story along. The people they meet are colorful or interesting. The peripheral subplots are good too, like will the Uncle propose to Rose or allow some rich dude with a Jaguar to snatch her up?

The film runs 99 minutes and was shot in Los Angeles, California, including Topanga Canyon.

GRADE: B
  • Wuchakk
  • 13. Juni 2015
  • Permalink
4/10

disconnected from the original

Vada Sultenfuss (Anna Chlumsky) is now 13. Her father Harry (Dan Aykroyd) and Shelly (Jamie Lee Curtis) are expecting a new baby. She's given a school assignment to write about someone who achieved something and who she's never met. She decides to write about her mother Maggie (Angeline Ball). For spring vacation, she goes to her mother's home town L.A. to stay with uncle Phil. She is assisted by the son of Phil's girlfriend, Nick Zsigmond.

The lost of Macaulay Culkin in the first movie is tough enough. This one sends Vada to L.A. and abandons the rest of the cast. I'm willing to have Vada in her teenage years but I don't understand why she can't stay in her small town. She is essentially disconnected with the first movie. There is almost no point in doing a sequel in this way. The middle of this movie is terribly flat and meandering. The Maggie reveal is very touching but the rest of this is forgettable.
  • SnoopyStyle
  • 18. März 2016
  • Permalink
9/10

I liked this movie...

  • ppamjo2
  • 15. Dez. 2004
  • Permalink
6/10

Well, It Wasn't Bad.

My Girl is iconic. Who remembers the sequel made a few years later? It didn't work like the original one did. I'm not saying that this is a bad film, because it isn't at all. It just lacked in any real emotional connection that the first one had. This seemed to almost force-feed and recycle what worked in the original.

It is now the spring of 1974. Vada's interests in boys is rising and her maturity is growing since we last saw her. She was a spunky tomboy in the first one, but now she's more serious and lively, but still maintains the spunk and jazz that made Vada, Vada. She isn't much different from the last time we saw her, but there is still a believable change. Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis are also a tad different. People change, people grow.

Just before March Break, Vada is assigned to write a report about someone she admires but has never met. She decides to do it on her mother. She sees it as a chance to know more about herself and gain her own independence. She badgers her father into flying to Los Angeles, which was where her mother grew up, to do research. She stays with her uncle (Richard Masur) who is living with Rose and Nick Zsigmond. Nick is played by Austin O'Brien who becomes Vada's childhood romance. At first, they don't get along, but then something grows. O'Brien was really good as Nick. Anybody that trashes him are wrong. Unfortunately, he's no Macaulay Culkin. Culkin is the better actor with more charm and Thomas J was better than Nick. In this, is seems that Vada and Nick are just a fling that will end just as she returns home. But her relationship with Thomas J was magical and it felt like it would last forever. Her explorations to get to know her mother are all fun and adventurous with the little romance at the backdrop. I liked the adventure aspect, but it wasn't a whole lot interesting.

The acting by all (mainly Chlumsky) are perfect. But it lost the emotional impact and self discovery that made the original so great. Sure Vada finds out more about herself, but it doesn't impact the viewer much. Plus, the magic from the first was lost. Magic is the only suitable word for this. The emotional impact is rather low too. I have mixed bags with this.

Either download it or buy the double feature. If you already have the first, no need for this.

2.5/4
  • Movie-ManDan
  • 3. Feb. 2017
  • Permalink

Good but not great

No, MG2 isn't as good as the first movie, but how often are sequels better than the first? (I will make a case for Toy Story 2.) Anyway, the acting is strong (especially Anna Chlumsky, who is wonderful again as Vada), the plot of Vada researching her mother's life is very interesting, but the subplots are a little pedestrian and cliched. I read a review that claimed Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis were "sleepwalking" in their roles, but in all fairness, they didn't really have much to do in this movie. The fabulous Christine Ebersole steals several scenes, and Austin O'Brien does a good job here as well. It may not be the greatest film ever, but you could certainly do worse!
  • Monika-5
  • 22. März 2000
  • Permalink
1/10

Heavy-handed sentiment...'family friendly' in the worst sense

The sequel nobody asked for. Anna Chlumsky reprises her role of preteen Vada Sultenfuss from 1991's "My Girl", an inquisitive Pennsylvania schoolgirl who, spurred on by an English class writing assignment, flies to Los Angeles by herself to hopefully learn more about her late mother--a budding actress who died in childbirth--from her uncle. Sloppy, excruciatingly thin coming-of-age nonsense, unconvincingly set in the 1970s, hopes to pick up the slack (and wow sixth-grade girls) by introducing shaggy-haired Austin O'Brien as a potential love-interest for Chlumsky's Vada (her previous puppy love amour, Macaulay Culkin, having expired in the first installment). But the eyeball-rolling O'Brien and the judgmental, condescending Chlumsky are a dismaying pair--neither child has a lot on their mind--while the period rock songs on the soundtrack (some of them generic) fail to provide the nostalgic lift intended. * from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • 5. Mai 2011
  • Permalink
5/10

If you liked the first one, might as well see what happens

When you see the ad/movie in video store of MY GIRL 2 you're like, how on earth could they have made a sequel to such a great first movie. MY GIRL 2; of course like many other sequels don't live up to their originals but this sequel is touching and funny. 5/10
  • Dana82
  • 5. Juli 2000
  • Permalink
5/10

Not Perfect! But Still Good

  • killbill_28
  • 21. März 2007
  • Permalink
6/10

Not bad at all

  • lisafordeay
  • 13. Okt. 2020
  • Permalink
5/10

My Girl 2 shouldn't have come out.

My Girl 2 shouldn't have come out. We all loved My Girl but I think that My Girl 2 tried to be just as good as My Girl but it never got close. Just listen to the title MY GIRL 2 ---come on. All and all it was alright.
  • Dana82
  • 28. Juni 1999
  • Permalink
6/10

It is rather a less inspired film and one that lacks the courage and complexity of its previous one but has good moments

My Girl was a huge worldwide success, bringing us a plot that handled delicately and carefully serious and deep themes such as the relationship between life and death, losses, mourning, among other important themes, told under the eyes of Vada, a girl of 11 years in Pennsylvania. It was a film that certainly amused and caused a stir in the audience due to the unfolding of the plot.

Three years have passed since the events of the first film. There is an upcoming holiday and Vada Sultenfuss (Anna Chlumsky) convinces his father, who allows him to travel to his uncle Phil's (Richard Masur) home in Los Angeles. Vada's drama teacher gives her the task of interpreting the life of someone she has never met, so she wants to research her own mother's life. On this voyage of discovery, she has as partner Nick Zsigmond (Austin O'Brien), the son of Rose Zsigmond (Christine Ebersole), his uncle's girlfriend.

Written by Janet Kovalcik, this sequence brings an important change of tone, leaving it appealingly sentimental. The first film forced Vada to face some shocking realities (the death of a best friend, the senility of a grandmother) and was heavily salted with mortal humor, while in this sequence the atmosphere of the sequence is softer and more golden. Among other things, the film is a nostalgic Valentine's Day for Los Angeles in the most remote days, when the city still used the mystique of a relaxed post-hippie lotus land.

This second part ends up running away from the thorniest issues previously discussed. Obviously, due to the protagonist's entry into adolescence, the film starts to deal with other themes, tries to advance the plot and at the same time fails to let go. Right at the beginning of the plot, we see that Vada remains the best friend of Judy (Lauren Ashley), who in turn, starts to become interested in one of her schoolmates. Already Vada, she still does not know how to deal with this adolescent phase and does not know how to identify the signs and these new feelings. It is a phase of discoveries presenting itself to her, her best friend, typical of the age they are in, when feelings are transformed and interests are changed. At the same time, Vada is also about to become the older sister, as Shelley (Jamie Lee Curtis) is pregnant with her father (Dan Aykroyd). When Harry asks his daughter to switch rooms when the baby arrives, Vada and the audience have another sign that the girl has grown up and that she had to adapt to the new reality.

Just as life goes on and things change, Vada also feels the need to have answers about her mother when her teacher asks her students to write about someone they have never met. This causes more changes to occur in the girl's life when she needs to go to Los Angeles, where her mother was born and lived a large part of her life. Arriving in the city, where her uncle Phil (Richard Masur) also lives, she also meets Nick, the son of his uncle's girlfriend, with whom she starts to live intensely for the following days in search of answers about her mother's past. The script then divides into these two stories. One is Vada's present in Pennsylvania, while the search for the past unfolds in Los Angeles, where the plot actually unfolds. And this is perhaps the big problem with the film, which is very much tied to the past and little developed.

Starting with the clues about the past of Vada's mother, Maggie (Angeline Ball). The ease with which the tracks appear, which are forced to connect only in order to make the script go, is remarkable. Since the focus of the plot was on searching for Maggie's past, there was a lack of more outstanding characters who could, in fact, unravel and show the public more effectively the relationship they had with Maggie, how she influenced their lives positively or negative, bringing more complexity and significant discoveries, that would make the public really care more about their past, so that we could, in fact, surprise and meet Maggie together with Vada and share with her the surprises, anxieties and joys to measure that this "investigation" was evolving.

Furthermore, small discoveries are significantly less important, such as having been suspended from a class, for example. The ultimate goal was that, to show an ordinary woman, with her dreams and talents, who cannot complete them. Maggie wanted to experience everything in life, including being a mother, but unfortunately her dreams and plans were interrupted. However, the feeling that the public remains, is that it was necessary to bring more layers to the character and more relevant facts about her life. With the exception of Jeffrey Pommeroy (John David Souther), who provides us with these significant and exciting moments, we do not feel the same with the other characters that appear throughout the projection.

The "dubious scenario" of the film is made even more by the approach of director Howard Zieff and screenwriter Janet Kovalcik. Everything in this film is full of sermons about the importance of being yourself. Vada does not feel any twinge of anger at the loss of her mother or any doubt about her search. She is prematurely mature. There are indeed connections to the previous film across the Pennsylvania core, and even Thomas J. is quoted and remembered in a passage in Los Angeles, but otherwise, this sequence could easily pass as a single film. This investigation in LA is far from intrinsic complexity, difficult to deal with, striking emotional moments or the poetry of the previous plot. Another aspect that harms is the relationship between Vada and Nick. After less than a week, teenagers develop a fast and shallow relationship, and it doesn't even come close to the relationship that Vada had with Thomas J., the sincere friendship of a whole childhood. Not that the actors are in bad shape, but the script is extremely hurried to develop the plot in California and features several forgettable characters. The feeling that remains is that both the sets and the plot could have been developed much more effectively.

Much of the original cast is back, but that's another problem. In addition to the hurried relationship between the teenage protagonists, Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis are only supporting actors, far from the main story and only serve to situate the viewer in the plot. They do not have the same importance in the relationship with Vada that they had in the previous film. It is really a waste of talent and the proof that perhaps taking the plot to another city and exploring the past was a wrong choice, neglected in relation to actually advancing the plot and character development. Already the most incisive presence of Uncle Phil (Richard Masur), now with his girlfriend Rose (Christine Ebersole) brings some good moments of comedy when talking about how Phil does not expose his feelings when making a more serious commitment to Rose. In spite of having good moments, they seem to be out of place, which only serve to produce a conversation between Vada and Nick, when they wonder if they would be related from that moment on with the romance between Phil and Rose.

It is rather a less inspired film and one that lacks the courage and complexity of its previous copy, but that, in a way, still presents us with a few discoveries about Vada's past, leaves us a little apprehensive with one of these revelations that put in check the girl's true paternity, and which shows how the girl's life is after a few years, she overcame or learned to deal with the losses of the past. It is a film with the right heart, but it does not have the same innocence and magic as before. It is worth visiting, especially for the charisma and talent of Anna Chlumsky, who once again steals the show.
  • fernandoschiavi
  • 6. Feb. 2021
  • Permalink
1/10

Not as good as the first movie

  • Sandorafromtheeast
  • 23. Juni 2025
  • Permalink
10/10

Don't listen to the haters, it's lovely!

It's a beautiful movie which follows up perfectly from the first. It retains that My Girl magic that we all fell in love with in the first movie. People out there love to hate, but please don't listen to them. Watch it for yourself
  • sophiahwright
  • 12. Dez. 2020
  • Permalink
7/10

so she came back?

  • emilie8605
  • 16. Dez. 2003
  • Permalink

Perhaps this film might've gotten better reviews if it weren't titled "My Girl 2".

  • scorchingsirius
  • 11. Jan. 2004
  • Permalink
7/10

More appropriate for younger children than the original, but not as good.

This film was rather heartwarming whereas the original was more heartbreaking. As much as I loved the original, this film isn't as emotionally hard hitting for young children.
  • krolewskimichael
  • 31. Juli 2018
  • Permalink

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