Dr. Dolittle 2 Movie Review
Dr. Dolittle 2 Review

"Dr. Dolittle 2" Overview

Rating: PG
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Steve CarrProducer : John Davis,Joseph Singer
Screenwiter : Larry Levin
Starring Eddie Murphy, Kristen Wilson, Kyla Pratt, Jeffery Jones, Kevin Pollack, Lil Zane, Lisa Kudrow, Steve Zahn, Norm Macdonald, Cedric The Entertainer, Molly Shannon
Sequels just never measure up to their predecessors. Every now and then it
happens -- a la Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, The Empire Strikes Back, and
The Rescuers Down Under -- but those are the exceptions.
The original Eddie Murphy comedy Dr. Dolitte was a lukewarm and tepid yet
entertaining movie filled with cheap laughs, terrible acting, and a painful
reminder of Murphy’s slow decent into another slump. But alas, the studio gods
spoke and a sequel became unavoidable when the original Dr. Dolittle (er, the
original Eddie Murphy Dolittle, itself being a remake) grossed over $290
million dollars worldwide -- not including sales from the hip-hop soundtrack.
Well, Murphy has lost the nappy deadlocks of the first film and again takes on
the role of the intrepid animal doctor/interpreter Dr. Dolittle in Dr. Dolittle
2. This time around, Dolittle has honed his communication skills and runs a
joint animal and human medical office in beautiful San Francisco. Over the
past few years, Dolittle has become the Sigmund Freud of the animal kingdom --
providing sexual advice to a turtle with erectile dysfunction, overseeing
support groups for stray dogs, and guest-starring on Crocodile Hunter.
One night, a raccoon with a thick Brooklyn accent shows up at his door and
requests that the Doc meet with The Beaver -- the head of some type of animal
Mafia in the Marin County forests. The Beaver requests that the Doc stop a
evil logging company -- controlled by Jeffery Jones and Kevin Pollak -- from
clear-cutting the homes of all of the forest dwellers. The only way to save
the forest lies in the loins of an endangered species of bear named Archie
(voiced by Steve Zahn), whom the Doc has to retrain in how to live in the wild
so he can mate with another bear named Ava (voiced by Lisa Kudrow). If Archie
and Ava do the mystery dance and produce little Archies and Avas, the forest
would then be deemed off-limits from the clutches of evil logging company. The
only problem is that Archie is a circus bear who best knows how to dance to
disco and has the demeanor of Woody Allen -- Wayne Newton in a bear suit. So
its up to the Doc to teach Archie how to be the alpha male of the wild, save
the forest from the overacting of Kevin Pollak, learn how to communicate with
his own human family, and somehow make us believe that a talking monkey has a
drinking problem.
Dr. Dolittle 2 could’ve been a contender. In a decade of film – Nutty
Professor II, Bowfinger, Life, Holy Man, Metro, A Vampire in Brooklyn, Beverly
Hills Cop III, and Boomerang -- Murphy has done little worth remembering. But
in Dr. Dolittle 2, Murphy gives one of his better performances in recent
years. He seems looser, more interested in the role, and gives fleeting
glimpses of that energetic and sharp humor that made him so famous in the
‘80s. Still, he seems reserved and unsure about how to work in this brave new
world of family films and wholesome entertainment.
The voice talent is where the gold lies. Steve Zahn’s dry wit and apathy give
Archie the Bear the comedic edge it needs to compliment the excellent training
of the animal (coupled with his CGI manipulation). Norm Macdonald returns in
his role of the wisecracking family dog Lucky and provides added humor. The
various voice talents of Cedric the Entertainer, Michael Rappaport, Kudrow, and
Molly Shannon are witty but don’t draw attention away from the amazing
animatronics of the talking animals.
But Dolittle 2 suffers from a serious identity crisis and, like the original,
never really sells the humanization of its animal characters. Worse still, the
film constantly veers among being a Hallmark special, an environmentalist call
to arms, a cheap rip-off of a Farrelly brothers comedy complete with fart and
poop jokes, and a family film about cute animals and important messages like
"being yourself and never compromising your dreams."
Even with its flaws, Dr. Dolittle 2 is a decent matinee movie for the kiddies.
The film also provides enough humor for those grown-ups in the audience brave
enough to sit through 90 plus minutes of endless product placements, Eddie
Murphy playing Dean Martin to the Jerry Lewis antics of a talking bear, and the
bear singing "I Will Survive." [For a very special treat try watching Max
karaoke "I Will Survive." -Ed.]
Let’s just call that a warning.
Does a bear go in the woods... or the tub?
Reviewer: Max Messier





