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IMDbPro

Le père de la mariée II

Original title: Father of the Bride Part II
  • 1995
  • PG
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
44K
YOUR RATING
Steve Martin and Kimberly Williams-Paisley in Le père de la mariée II (1995)
George Banks must deal not only with the pregnancy of his daughter, but also with the unexpected pregnancy of his wife.
Play trailer2:35
2 Videos
43 Photos
Romantic ComedyComedyFamilyRomance

George Banks must deal not only with his daughter's pregnancy, but also with his wife's.George Banks must deal not only with his daughter's pregnancy, but also with his wife's.George Banks must deal not only with his daughter's pregnancy, but also with his wife's.

  • Director
    • Charles Shyer
  • Writers
    • Albert Hackett
    • Frances Goodrich
    • Nancy Meyers
  • Stars
    • Steve Martin
    • Diane Keaton
    • Martin Short
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    44K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Shyer
    • Writers
      • Albert Hackett
      • Frances Goodrich
      • Nancy Meyers
    • Stars
      • Steve Martin
      • Diane Keaton
      • Martin Short
    • 87User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:35
    Official Trailer
    Father of the Bride Part II: 2 Movie Collection
    Clip 0:46
    Father of the Bride Part II: 2 Movie Collection
    Father of the Bride Part II: 2 Movie Collection
    Clip 0:46
    Father of the Bride Part II: 2 Movie Collection

    Photos43

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    + 37
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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Steve Martin
    Steve Martin
    • George Banks
    Diane Keaton
    Diane Keaton
    • Nina Banks
    Martin Short
    Martin Short
    • Franck Eggelhoffer
    Kimberly Williams-Paisley
    Kimberly Williams-Paisley
    • Annie Banks-MacKenzie
    • (as Kimberly Williams)
    George Newbern
    George Newbern
    • Bryan MacKenzie
    Kieran Culkin
    Kieran Culkin
    • Matty Banks
    BD Wong
    BD Wong
    • Howard Weinstein
    Peter Michael Goetz
    Peter Michael Goetz
    • John MacKenzie
    Kate McGregor-Stewart
    Kate McGregor-Stewart
    • Joanna MacKenzie
    • (as Kate McGregor Stewart)
    Jane Adams
    Jane Adams
    • Dr. Megan Eisenberg
    Eugene Levy
    Eugene Levy
    • Mr. Habib
    Rebecca Chambers
    Rebecca Chambers
    • Young Woman at Gym
    April Ortiz
    April Ortiz
    • Olivia
    Dulcy Rogers
    • Ava (the Beautician)
    Kathy Anthony
    • Beautician #2
    Adrian Canzoneri
    • Justin
    Lori Alan
    Lori Alan
    • Wife Mrs. Habib
    Stephanie Miller
    • Annie Banks (Age 4)
    • Director
      • Charles Shyer
    • Writers
      • Albert Hackett
      • Frances Goodrich
      • Nancy Meyers
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews87

    6.143.6K
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    Featured reviews

    QueenMab85

    Funnier than the first one

    I thought the movie was quite funny, especially scenes like Martin Short doing a workout with the pregnant mother and daughter...that was really great! Martin Short is basically one of the highlights of the movie...his accent is so weird and funny that you have to love him. Steve Martin was also good, and I liked his reactions to everything. Overall, the flick was better than the first one, and cute. But after awhile, Steve Martin gets a bit annoying with his obsessing over the pregnant women.
    7namashi_1

    A Well-Done Sequel!

    A sequel to immensely likable Father of the Bride, 'Father of the Bride Part II' is A Well-Done Sequel! Its enjoyable as well as emotional!

    'Father of the Bride Part II' Synopsis: George Banks must accept the reality of what his daughter's ascension from daughter to wife, and now, to mother means when placed into perspective against his own stage of life.

    'Father of the Bride Part II' is worthy sequel of a wonderful prequel. The characters still appeal, the humor works & the emotional moments are heartfelt as well. Nancy Meyers & Charles Shyer's Screenplay is genuinely well-done. Charles Shyer's Direction, on the other-hand, is good. Cinematography & Editing are fair.

    Performance-Wise: Steve Martin is lovable. He reprises his part of a loving/possessive dad commendably. Diane Keaton is flawless, yet again. Kimberly Williams-Paisley is cute. George Newbern is sincere. Kieran Culkin is adequate. Martin Short entertains.

    On the whole, 'Father of the Bride Part II' is a satisfying sequel.
    keith7821

    Better than the original

    "Father of the Bride, Part II" is actually a remake of the 1951 sequel, "Father's Little Dividend", which is turn is a sequel to "Father of the Bride". All of the principle cast members from the original film return with more outrageous situations and more laughs.

    George Banks (Steve Martin) is just getting over the wedding of his daughter (Kimberly Williams) when he has even more distressing news, she is going to have a baby! This doesn't settle well with him considering he feels old and is not ready to be a grandfather. Not only that, but his wife Nina (Diane Keaton) is also pregnant! Talk about a wacked situation! This not only makes George a grandfather but also a father at the age of 50.

    This movie and the original "Father of the Bride" are two of my favorite movies of all time. They are both dramatic, heartwarming and funny. One thing I like is the fact that it continues the storyline very smoothly with references from the first film and Diane Keaton has a lot more to do in this. Martin Short also returns as the wacky ex-wedding coordinator who now coordinates baby showers, lucky for the Banks family! Rent the original and this one for a night of humor and drama, and for anyone who is having a baby, make them watch this!
    7ElMaruecan82

    Just when you think you're out with your daughter's wedding, they pull you back in with the first child ...

    We've left George Banks mourning the loss of his precious little darling in the first "Father of the Bride" movie and what do you know, they're just coming to announce something "big" and I have a theory: the announcement is actually handled like the film's first gag. Think about it: either you know the workings of matrimony and can easily anticipate that the next step after a wedding is a crawling toothless creature keeping you awake at 4 am (especially if the time span is four years), or there's the possibility that you've looked upon the poster, or maybe, you just know that the film is based on Vincente Minnelli's "Father's Little Dividend" the follow-up to the original "Father of the Bride".

    How is the pregnancy a gag? Well, it is one in the sense that George Banks, a man entering his sixtieth decade of existence is still incapable to figure what the news will be... and seems incapable to conceive (no pun intended) that Annie is a grown-up now. His denial of the mere possibility of a pregnancy is absurd enough to raise the earliest chuckles and tell us that the film will swim in the same waters than the first. Yes indeed, it's Steve Martin once again as the unmovable conservative force facing the unstoppable cycle of life. And so when everybody's reunited to hear the news, the way he looks at his son-in-law as some cartoon villain who put the final stamp of his "ownership" is quite similar to the quick flash of John Candy as the devil in "Planes, Trains and Automobiles".

    Spirit-wise, we're in a film tailor-made for Steve Martin, the man against which the world seems to have concocted a personal conspiracy and it is a fine continuation of the original and a reminder of the charm of these 90s movies where narratives that could be deemed as old-fashioned by today's standards were still considered viable. Don't get me wrong, the premise is rather ludicrous and I don't mean the pregnancy of Nina Banks but the fact that it's synchronized with her own daughter's pregnancy. It doesn't take a medium to guess that the two women will lose waters within the same timeline or as Roger Ebert put it (more eloquently): No prizes for guessing that they may find themselves delivering at exactly the same moment. That said, it takes a lot of warmth and writing skills to start with a crazy idea and manage to make everything flow smoothly without letting the viewer ever feel that his intelligence is to be suspended as well as his disbelief.

    The first act is basically a retread of "Dividend" with George having a middle-age crisis and trying to convince himself that he's still got it. He goes to the gymnasium, dyes his hair and tries to resurrect his lost youth through one sensual night with Nina and cinematic laws of pregnancy working, guess what happens next. Maybe you don't remember that episode of "Little House on the Prairie" when Caroline Ingalls thought she was "late" because of pregnancy but it just happened to be the menopause. Well, this episode must have marked Nancy Meyers for the same misunderstanding is used in reverse. And it's only fair that the writer of "Baby Boom" wanted her muse Diane Keaton to embody a real form of motherhood. Diane Keaton still looks young at 45 but the effort to 'olden her' through her fashion style and haircut makes indeed the pregnancy a little more awkward.

    But awkwardness be damned, these little touches never really alter the enjoyment for the pregnancy is never treated as a source of cheap gags and since the film recycles every character from the original, there's a certain comfort in watching achieving people trying to reach states of happiness, making us happy by proxy. There are some serious moments here and there, one involving Nina putting George in his place and telling him to consider her pregnancy with a little more respect and various subplots disseminated here and there, most notably one involving the house sale to a foreigner played by a "youngish" Eugene Levy. Nothing quite new under the horizon but there's something exciting about the presence of Martin Short as the extravagant wedding planner (turned house decorator for the need of the plot). Short and Martin share many great moments especially a touching one when Banks discovers the future baby's room.

    Of course, the film had to commit a little mistake by injecting another slapstick sequence, involving sleeping pills taken at the wrong time, and I think this could have undermined the film. Many comedies that contain pregnancy commit the cardinal sin of handling a universally touching moment with cheap grotesque jokes but everything goes well in "Father of the Bride II" and it owes a lot to the presence of Jane Adams as the doctor charged of the delivery. The actress plays her role straight without any awareness of all the goofy stuff around and in her own humble way, she elevates the final moments of the film. Talk about a great casting.

    And it's for touches like this that once again, you can't just dismiss movies like "Father of the Bride". While not as good as its predecessors, it's enjoyable and simply said, fun to watch. It's also interesting to see Kieran Culkin having more interesting lines than in the first film revealing some better acting dispositions than his brother, whose stardom was already fading. Kimberley Williams is always as enchanting and irritating as the Annie Banks but I have a soft spot for Diane Keaton who's not given the easier role and pulls it off with sweetness, credibility and a good sense of humor. What this great actress can't do I don't know.

    Not a masterpiece of originality, but as a film about two deliveries, "Father of the Bride II" does deliver.
    Plissken-4

    Not as good as the first, but good family fun

    This movie is as thin as you can get. Its' emotions are easily played. There are no surprises. It is very predictable. And I say...so what? What is wrong with that? This is an American Dream movie. Everything goes perfectly and everyone is as happy as can be. Why should it be a complicated character study? It deals with the birth of babies. There's no complex feelings that need to be dealt with in this situation. A life is being created. A family is being blessed. A baby's birth is a time for love and hope. This movie has both in spades. It's a very positive movie that shows the joy a new baby brings. Every parent-to-be should watch it. A child's birth is an emotional event with no equal. This movie knows it and milks it for all its' worth. My only complaint is it should have been called Parents of the Bride. Way too much time is spent with the relationship between Steve Martin and Diane Keaton. There should have been more attention paid to Kimberly Williams. Not only were the scenes between her and Martin the best scenes in this and the original, but Kimberly Williams is the most beautiful actress to come out of Hollywood in many years. Forget all the blond, silicone filled, bimbos that every teenage boy raves about. Ms. Williams is a natural beauty that is a true role model for all young girls. She, and her character, is beautiful, intelligent, and has a heart of gold. Had her relationship with Martin been more focused, this sequel would have surpassed the original. While it doesn't do that, it is still a perfect film for the entire family to watch. *** out of ****.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The set used for the interior of the Banks' home had to be rebuilt from scratch for the sequel. With no presumption of a sequel during production of the original movie, the set was destroyed after production completed. Set crew had to recreate the entirety of the set based only on a few remnant sketches of the original set, and had to estimate most measurements, based on the known sizes of various reference items in the original film.
    • Goofs
      Annie and Bryan's wedding invitation is shown with the date October 30 when in Le père de la mariée (1991) they were married January 6th.
    • Quotes

      Franck Eggelhoffer, Howard Weinstein: [both chanting to George] Every party has a pooper, that why we invited you! Party pooper! Party pooper! Every party has a pooper, that's why we invited you, George Baaanks!

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: White Man's Burden/Last Summer in the Hamptons/Wild Bill/The Journey of August King/Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Give Me the Simple Life
      Written by Rube Bloom and Harry Ruby

      Arranged by Alan Silvestri and Robert F. Mann (as Bob Mann)

      Performed by Steve Tyrell

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 6, 1996 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El padre de la novia Parte II
    • Filming locations
      • West Dayton Street & South Delacy Street, Pasadena, California, USA(gang encounter scene)
    • Production companies
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Sandollar Productions
      • Taylor-Made Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $30,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $76,594,107
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,134,978
      • Dec 10, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $76,594,107
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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