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Nutty Professor II: The Klumps

 
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The Nutty Professor II: The Klumps

  • Director: Peter Segal
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Gross-Out Comedy, Fantasy Comedy
  • Themes: Eccentric Families, Split Personalities, Double Life
  • Main Cast: Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Eddie Murphy, Janet Jackson, Larry Miller, John Ales, Richard Gant
  • Release Year: 2000
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 105 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Overweight scientific genius Sherman Klump and his extended family are back in this sequel to the 1996 comedy smash The Nutty Professor. Sherman (played once again by Eddie Murphy) has come up with a discovery that ought to make him a multimillionaire: a youth serum that turns back the user's body clock. Sherman has also found time for a social life and has fallen in love with Denise Gains (Janet Jackson), a brilliant woman involved in DNA research. Sherman and Denise are engaged, but Sherman is still troubled by Buddy Love, the dark side of his personality that he wants to purge from his psyche forever. He persuades Denise to help him by splicing Buddy out of his DNA structure, but the experiment doesn't go as planned: instead of destroying Buddy, Sherman and Denise free him, and Buddy's first order of business is to get his hands on Sherman's youth serum, which Sherman has hidden at his family's house. In addition to Klump and Love, Murphy also plays Mama, Papa, Grandma, and nephew Ernie Klump, thanks to the makeup magic of Rick Baker. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Richard Gant - Denise's Father; Anna Maria Horsford - Denise's Mother; Melinda McGraw - Leanne Guilford; Jamal Mixon - Ernie Klump, Jr.

Credit

Greg Papalia - Art Director, Pamela Basker - Casting, Michael Ewing - Co-producer, James Whitaker - Co-producer, Sharen Davis - Costume Designer, Josh King - First Assistant Director, Peter Segal - Director, William Kerr - Editor, Eddie Murphy - Executive Producer, Jerry Lewis - Executive Producer, Tom Shadyac - Executive Producer, James D. Brubaker - Executive Producer, Karen Kehela - Executive Producer, David Newman - Composer (Music Score), Happy Walters - Musical Direction/Supervision, Gary Jones - Musical Direction/Supervision, Rick Baker - Makeup Special Effects, William Elliott - Production Designer, Dean Semler - Cinematographer, Brian Grazer - Producer, Jose Antonio Garcia - Sound/Sound Designer, Kelsee Devoreaux - Stunts, Barry W. Blaustein - Screenwriter, David Sheffield - Screenwriter, Chris Weitz - Screenwriter, Paul Weitz - Screenwriter, Jon Farhat - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jennifer C. Bell - Visual Effects Producer

Similar Movies

Big Momma's House; Master of Disguise
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Nutty Professor II: The Klumps

Theatrical poster for Nutty Professor II: The Klumps
Directed by Peter Segal
Produced by James D. Brubaker
Brian Grazer
Karen Kehela
Jerry Lewis
Eddie Murphy
Tom Shadyac
Written by Jerry Lewis (characters)
Steve Oedekerk
Barry W. Blaustein
David Sheffield
Paul Weitz
Chris Weitz
Starring Eddie Murphy
Janet Jackson
Larry Miller
John Ales
Richard Gant
Anna Maria Horsford
Music by David Newman
Cinematography Dean Semler
Editing by William Kerr
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) July 28, 2000
Running time 106 min. (109 in director's cut)
Country USA
Language English
Budget $84,000,000 (estimated)
Preceded by The Nutty Professor

Nutty Professor II: The Klumps is a 2000 comedy film directed by Peter Segal. The film is a sequel to the The Nutty Professor and stars Eddie Murphy and Janet Jackson. Murphy plays not only the inept but brilliant scientist, Sherman Klump, as in the first film, but also (wearing different, but equally elaborate makeup) most of Sherman's family as well. Various subplots involving his family occupy a substantial part of the film.

Just like the first film, the film's theme song is "Macho Man" by The Village People, which this time is played during the end credits.

Contents

Plot

As the film opens, Sherman is working on a new miracle formula – this time, the fountain of youth. He is also preparing to marry a fellow scientist, Denise Gaines (Janet Jackson). Unfortunately, he has started suffering from personality lapses that are threatening to alienate his bride-to-be: against his will, he acts like the obnoxious, hypersexed Buddy Love of the first film. After a particularly unpleasant incident, Sherman goes to his lab to analyze his DNA and locates Buddy Love's DNA in an abnormal gene. He decides to use Denise's genetic research methods to isolate the gene and permanently extract Buddy Love's DNA from his own. His assistant, Jason, tries to stop him, warning him that he might damage his health or even lose his intelligence. Sherman disregards the warning and, alone in his lab late at night, extracts Buddy's DNA.

The orphaned DNA, a glowing blob of jelly, combines with a hair from a basset hound and grows spontaneously into an adult man, Buddy Love—now a fully autonomous being. Thanks to his doggy heritage, however, this Buddy Love has a tendency to chase cats and cars. Sherman, meanwhile, has inflicted so much genetic damage on himself by removing Buddy that his brain cells begin dying at an exponential rate.

Buddy breaks into the Klump's house and steals some of Sherman's youth formula (not before being mouth-kissed by Granny), planning to sell it to the highest bidder, then adds a household chemical to the remainder of the mixture. When Sherman administers the adulterated potion to a hamster in front of a large audience, the hamster grows to enormous size. The Dean (Miller) hides from the hamster under a fur coat, which the hamster sees as a female. The hamster performs a lewd act (offscreen) on the Dean. After the fiasco, the deeply traumatised Dean tells Sherman that he is "fat...and dumb...and fired."

However, This the least of Sherman's problems; his brain damage is now reaching a critical level. With the help of his loyal lab assistant, Jason, he devises a strategy to restore his mind. He plans to reintegrate Buddy into his DNA by reverting him back to the jelly-like matter he used to be, then sucking him up through a straw.

Sherman concocts a new, stronger youth formula when he is interrupted by Dean Richmond, demanding to know what Sherman's playing at. Richmond explains Buddy Love is selling the youth formula to a rival company, and believes Sherman to be in on it. Sherman gets a tennis ball, and heads with Dean Richmond to the office where Buddy is pitching the youth formula he stole; if he can revert Buddy to an infantile state and consume him, the return of Buddy's DNA to his own system will repair the damage that he originally caused. When Sherman arrives Buddy laughs claiming: "Well, if it is Professor Sherman Klump, the inventor of Jumbo, the horny hamster" much to Richmonds trauma. Sherman then throws the tennis ball, and Buddy's dog genes compel him to give chase. Sherman has coated the ball with his new, super potent youth formula, and when Buddy catches the ball, he turns into a toddler. He runs off, then melts into a gelatinous blob that continues fleeing. Finally, Buddy dies when he evaporates into a public coin fountain. But unfortunately, for Sherman, he can no longer get back inside of him.

Denise and Cletus arrive, and see Sherman and Richmond. Sherman, before his brain becomes seriously damaged, sadly tells Denise, whom he no longer recognizes, that he no smart, never, no more. Denise starts crying, and one of her tears lands on the dried blob, causing it to trickle into the fountain. As his companions begin to usher him away, Denise promising to take care of him, Sherman turns and mumbles something about "pretty water". They see the fountain's water glowing a bright neon blue. Denise realizes that Buddy's DNA is still alive in the water. She and Cletus force Sherman to drink the water before Buddy evaporates, and he rapidly regains his mental faculties. In the last scene, Sherman and Denise get married. As in the first film, bloopers accompany the closing credits.

Cast

  • Eddie Murphy as Professor Sherman Klump/Buddy Love/Cletus 'Papa' Marcellus Klump/Young Cletus Klump/Anna Pearl 'Mama' Jensen Klump/Ida Mae 'Granny' Jensen/Ernest "Ernie" Klump, Sr./Lance Perkins
  • Janet Jackson as Professor Denise Gaines
  • Larry Miller as Dean Richmond
  • John Ales as Jason
  • Richard Gant as Mr. Gaines
  • Anna Maria Horsford as Mrs. Gaines
  • Melinda McGraw as Leanne Guilford
  • Jamal Mixon as Ernie Klump Jr.

Reception

The film grossed over $42.5 million in its opening weekend and went on to a total gross of over $123.3 million. It garnered an additional $43 million in foreign markets.[1] Although audiences seemed to like it, The Klumps was widely panned by critics. Adjectives such as "obnoxious", "lowbrow", "bloated", and "unfunny" crop up frequently in reviews for this film, and Salon.com, which gave the movie one of its few positive notices, offers the rather faint praise "cheerfully vulgar".[2] The New Yorker's Anthony Lane is particularly severe; in addition to hating the film on general principles, he dismisses Murphy's playing of multiple characters as "minstrelling", and charges the actor with "at once feeding us what we like and despising us for swallowing it."[3] Most critics, however, mix a generally negative assessment of the movie with at least a nod towards Murphy's versatility and comic talent. However, Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper gave the film two thumbs up.

The Nutty Professor II: The Klumps was parodied by comedian Jack Black in the film Tropic Thunder, in which Black's character Jeff Portnoy plays several members of a comically obese family.

Soundtrack

Sequel

A sequel has been announced, tentatively titled Nutty Professor III with a late 2010 or early 2011 release. With Universal currently searching for writers of the new film.[4] Eddie Murphy is expected to return for the sequel, and possibly add a few new characters like Papa Clump's brothers family as a plot element Murphy and writers have said.[5]

References

  1. ^ The Nutty Professor II: The Klumps (2000)
  2. ^ Nutty Professor II: the Klumps at *RottenTomatoes.com
  3. ^ Lane, Anthony. The New Yorker, August 7, 2000.
  4. ^ Tilly, Chris (November 18, 2008). "More Nutty Professor?". IGN. http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/931/931372p1.html. Retrieved 2008-11-18. 
  5. ^ Morris, Clint (November 17, 2008). "Murphy klumps another Professor sequel". Moviehole. http://www.moviehole.net/200816616-murphy-klumps-another-professor-sequel. Retrieved 2008-11-18. 

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