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National Lampoon's European Vacation

 
Movies:

National Lampoon's European Vacation

  • Director: Amy Heckerling
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Parody/Spoof, Slapstick
  • Themes: Nothing Goes Right, Americans Abroad, Family Vacations
  • Main Cast: Chevy Chase, Beverly D'Angelo, Jason Lively, Dana Hill, Eric Idle
  • Release Year: 1985
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Despite the many adventures they suffered in National Lampoon's Vacation, the Griswold family decides to take another crack at having fun. This time, the doltish clan heads across the Atlantic for a whirlwind vacation after winning a game show. Will the monuments of Europe survive? ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Victor Lanoux - Thief; Elizabeth Arlen - Mrs. Garland; John Astin - Kent, "Pig in a Poke" host; Paul Bartel - Mr. Foeger; Gloria Charles - Stewardess; Jeannette Charles - Elizabeth II; Robbie Coltrane - Man in the Bathroom; Malcom Danare - Froegers' Son; Derek Deadman - Taxi Driver; David Gersh - Mr. Garland; Jacques Herlin - Hotel Desk Clerk; Peter Hugo - Prince Charles; Kevin Kendall - Froegers' Daughter; Sheila Kennedy - Game Show Hostess No. 1; Jorge Krimer - Unfortunate Express Agent; Maureen Lipman - Lady in the Bed; Trisha Long - Game Show Hostess No. 2; Angus MacKay - Announcer at Court; Jacques Maury - Hotel's Assistant Manager; Gwen Nelson - Hotel Manager's Mother; Didier Pain - Video Camera Thief; Alice Sapritch - Dowager on the Eiffel Tower; Massimo Sarchielli - Other Thief; Cynthia Szigeti - Mrs. Foeger; Erika Wackernagel - Helga Spritz; Julie Wooldridge - Princess Di; William Zabka - Jack; Moon Zappa - Rusty's California Girl; Wendy Goldman - London Stewardess; Sylvie Badalati - Rusty's French Girl, Cherie; Ballard Barclay - 2nd English Motorist; Isa Carol Horio - Blonde Girl at Eiffel Tower; Isabelle Massard - Brunette Girl at Eiffel Tower; Paul McDowell - 1st English Motorist; William Millowitsch - Fritz Spritz; Claudia Neideg - Rusty's German Girl, Claudia; Phillipe Stubelle - Cafe Waiter; Mel Smith - Hotel Manager

Credit

Alan Tomkins - Art Director, Les Tomkins - Art Director, Marion Dougherty - Casting, Gillian Lynne - Choreography, Graham Williams - Costume Designer, Amy Heckerling - Director, Pembroke J. Herring - Editor, Charles Fox - Composer (Music Score), Charles Fox - Musical Direction/Supervision, John Bettis - Songwriter, Terry Brock - Songwriter, Lloyd Chiate - Songwriter, Danny Gould - Songwriter, John T. Nelson - Songwriter, Jim Odom - Songwriter, Nicholas Forder - Makeup, Robert Cartwright - Production Designer, Robert Paynter - Cinematographer, John Hughes - Producer, Matty Simmons - Producer, Stuart Cornfeld - Producer, Simon Wakefield - Set Designer, Richard Richtsfeld - Special Effects, John Hughes - Screen Story, John Hughes - Screenwriter, Robert Klane - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Bon Voyage!; Funny Farm; If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium; Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation; Once Upon a Crime; One Crazy Summer; Planes, Trains and Automobiles; Summer Rental; Carry on Abroad; Ma and Pa Kettle on Vacation; East of Ipswich; The Facts of Life Goes to Paris; National Lampoon's Senior Trip; Les Bronzés; Tourist Trap; Liberte-Oleron; Johnson Family Vacation; Eurotrip; Bon Plan
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Wikipedia: National Lampoon's European Vacation
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National Lampoon's European Vacation

Theatrical Release Poster
Directed by Amy Heckerling
Produced by Matty Simmons
Written by John Hughes (characters),
Robert Klane
Starring Chevy Chase
Beverly D'Angelo
Dana Hill
Jason Lively
Victor Lanoux
Eric Idle
Music by Charles Fox
Cinematography Robert Paynter
Editing by Pembroke J. Herring
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) July 26, 1985
Running time 95 min.
Country United States United States
Language English
Preceded by National Lampoon's Vacation (1983)
Followed by National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989)

National Lampoon's European Vacation (originally given the working title Vacation '2' Europe) is a 1985 comedy film. The second film in National Lampoon's Vacation film series, it was directed by Amy Heckerling and stars Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo. Dana Hill and Jason Lively replace Dana Barron and Anthony Michael Hall as Griswold children Audrey and Rusty. After Hall declined to reprise his role (he decided to star in Weird Science instead), producers decided to recast both children.

This was the only Vacation film that did not feature Randy Quaid's "Cousin Eddie" character. Also, in European Vacation, the family's name is shown as "Griswald", though in every other film it is spelled "Griswold".

Contents

Plot

The film's plot is another family misadventure, full of over-the-top slapstick. Chase and D'Angelo again portray the married couple Clark and Ellen Griswold, living in suburban Chicago with two children, Rusty and Audrey. The family competes in a game show called "Pig in a Poke" (based on Family Feud, but with the families wearing pig costumes) and wins an all-expenses-paid trip to Europe, flying Pan Am Airways. In a whirlwind tour of western Europe, chaos of all sorts ensues. Their fleabag London hotel desk clerk is a sloppy, tattooed Cockney wearing a tank top (Mel Smith). Clark drives his family endlessly around the busy Lambeth Bridge roundabout for hours, unable to maneuver his way out of traffic, mentioning the Big Ben clock and Parliament with each pass. His wrong-way driving habits cause him to repeatedly knock over and injure the same frightened bicyclist (Eric Idle) who reappears in different scenes as if by coincidence, each time wearing more bandages than in the scene before. At Stonehenge, Clark backs their car into a priceless, ancient stone monolith, knocking all the stones down like dominoes, which they do not even notice happened as they happily leave the scene (while the family are at Stonehenge, Clark shouts for Rusty, who is standing right behind him. Rusty then replies, 'Yeah Dad?'. This conversation is a callback to a similar one which took place in National Lampoon's Vacation after Clark crashed the car in the middle of the desert).

In Paris, Clark throws Rusty's beret cap off the Eiffel Tower observation deck, causing a lady's dachshund to jump off after it; later, young Rusty meets a hooker at a bawdy Paris can-can dance show. While in Paris, the family's video camera is stolen by a passerby (Victor Lanoux) whom Clark had asked to take a picture of the family. Also Clark, with his terrible French manages to insult every native Frenchman.

The Griswolds burst in on a bewildered, elderly German village couple (Willy Millowitsch, Erika Wackernagel), who they mistakenly think are relatives but who serve them dinner anyhow, not knowing each other's languages. Clark manages to turn a lively thigh-slapping Bavarian folk dance stage performance, choreographed as are all the musical sequences by Gillian Lynne, into an all-out street brawl, after which he, fleeing hastily, gets their Citroën DS stuck in a too-narrow medieval archway after knocking down several street vendors' stands. The family members get on each others' nerves while riding together in a train compartment.

In Rome, Ellen angrily discovers that private sexy videos of her from the family's previously stolen video camera have been used in a billboard advertising a pornographic movie, leaving her completely humiliated. After screaming her anger at Clark (who lied that he had erased the video as he had promised her), Ellen storms off and encounters a man to whom she confesses her recent troubles, unaware that he is a thief; the man then gets her drunk and tries to have sex with Ellen. Believing that he's trying to rape her, Ellen tries to make a break for it, but when she resists, she is kidnapped by him and his fellow thieves, who also are holding a store manager for ransom, prompting Clark to rescue her. At the end while flying back to the U.S.A., Clark causes the plane to "knock" the Statue of Liberty's torch upside down.

Cameo appearances are made by John Astin (playing game show host "Kent Winkdale"), Moon Unit Zappa, Robbie Coltrane, Maureen Lipman, Leslie Phillips, Ballard Berkeley, Eric Idle and a musical appearance by The Power Station ("Some Like It Hot").

Landmarks and locations

Famous landmarks and sights appearing as the family tours England, France, West Germany, and Italy include:

Other locations used in the movie include:

  • Addison Avenue, Notting Hill (where Clark runs over Eric Idle's character)
  • Lambeth Palace Roundabout

Scenes supposedly taking place in West Germany were actually shot in Italy (Brixen).

Music

Follows

Sequels

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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