Legally Blonde 2: Red, White Blonde
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On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 36% based on 159 reviews, with an average rating 4.9/10. The site's critical consensus states: \"This blonde joke is less funny the second time around.\"[7] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 47 based on 39 critics, indicating \"mixed or average reviews\".[8] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of \"B\" on scale of A+ to F.[9] Entertainment Weekly ranked it at number 21 on their list of \"Top 25 Worst Sequels Ever Made\" (2006).[10]
Parents need to know that Legally Blonde 2: Red, White, and Blonde is a 2003 sequel in which a blonde sorority girl who found a way to succeed while attending Harvard Law School now must find a way to make it on Capitol Hill. This movie has some sexual references, including a plot development involving gay dogs. While the movie is a comedy and ostensibly celebrates being true to who you are, there's also an element of both mockery of the \"ditzy blonde\" stereotype as well as the unnecessary social message, \"Attractive and materialistic sorority rich white girls with blonde hair who grew up in Bel Air are people too!\" Also, it could be interesting for some families to see how far our society has come in how homosexuality is regarded now compared to 2003, when it was still a punchline to have politicians and the media make a big deal about how two dogs are gay. Furthermore, the issue of animal testing in labs for cosmetics companies could have been addressed with a little more depth without sacrificing the overall comedy feel of the movie. Profanity includes \"kickass,\" \"ass,\" \"crap,\" \"damn,\" and \"hell.\" Reference made to a dog \"turning tricks\" on a Hollywood street corner to survive -- paired with the image of a dog standing behind a street corner card game. Oral sex insinuation. A cover of Maxim magazine, covering the lead character's crusade to stop lab testing on dogs, has the headline, \"Doing it doggie style.\"
After Elle Woods, the eternally perky, fashionably adventurous, famously blonde Harvard Law grad gets fired by her law firm because of her opposition to animal testing, she takes her fight to Washington. As an aide for Congresswoman Victoria Rudd, she pushes for a bill to ban testing once and for all, but it's her building's doorman who advises her on how to get her way on the Hill.
There's nothing differentiating this movie from the first one. It's another loosely veiled moral tale about how we shouldn't always judge people by their unbearable outward appearance. Elle may act like she needs to be medicated for being overly optimistic, and she may seem like your everyday stereotypical dumb blonde, but there's much more to her than that. Whoopdie doo. 'Legally Blond 2' is one of the more useless sequels out on the market.
Usually members of our society recognize the hateful nature of making jokes that poke fun of members of a particular religion, nationality, sexual orientation, or otherwise identifiable group. Yet jokes about blondes abound. What do you think of this contradiction Is it acceptable
Unfortunately, I have to agree with the critics: the sequel, Legally Blonde 2: Red, White, and Blonde, is disappointing. I thought the jokes fell flat (although most people in the theater were laughing). The premise of the blonde bombshell being a lot smarter than she looks was barely strong enough to support the first movie and couldn't carry the sequel. But you know what I think the movie is a valuable contribution to popular culture and I'm glad it got made. Let's not forget--pop culture is the greatest teacher that the world has ever known. Most people get most of their information and opinions from the news and from pop culture sources. As many studies (under the heading of \"cultivation theory\") have shown, people forget that the data on which they base many of their opinions came from fictitious stories on TV or in the movies. They don't \"source discount\" that data to take account of the fact that it came from fiction. Under another theoretical approach found in cultural theory (\"active audience\"),viewers give the material their own spin, often coming up with interpretations at variance with those intended by the creators of the film or TV show. How many movies have dealt with the legislative process There have been quite a few movies and TV shows about the presidency, and a few on the Supreme Court, but how many can you name about Congress Right--Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), the Frank Capra-James Stewart classic. Perhaps one in a thousand young people have seen it. The same for Advise and Consent (1962) which concerns Senatorial consideration of a presidential appointment. And now, what else do you have A couple of interesting films concern Congressional campaigns--The Candidate (1972) and Bulworth (1998) come to mind--and there have been a few films about Congressional investigations (especially HUAC)--but how about pictures that dwell on the lawmaking process Aside from Mr. Smith, and a couple of ancient westerns like Gene Autry's Rovin' Tumbleweeds (1939), and a few forgotten TV shows and Simpson parodies , I can't think of any. Given the centrality of pop culture in our civic life, and the tremendous importance of what happens on Capital Hill, that is a major gap.
IN \"Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde,\" Elle Woods (Reese Witherspoon) is a saint in matching pinks, a paragon princess from Bel Air whose unslaked idealism about American life is her secret weapon. People underestimate her because of that blonde hair and goofy sincerity. They don't see the powerful force behind that apple pie smile until they're knocked off their feet, stalled in their tracks or simply won over.
Even though \"Legally Blonde 2\" is an extended clutter of uneven episodes, Elle fans will likely ignore the narrative shortcomings in favor of a well-loved character. She's still the naturally blonde Elle everyone knows and loves from \"Legally Blonde,\" the sleeper summer hit of 2001.
The character of Elle is both delightful and as fictional as they come. Come on! Has anyone ever known a girl in real life who spends this much time on her looks and is not stuck up That, however, is the charm of this movie. Elle Woods is a bubbly, generous, polite, outgoing, friendly girl wrapped up in a beautiful, high-maintenance package. Real or not, there are a lot of less entertaining ways to spend your afternoon than following around this 'dumb blonde'.
Legally Blonde 2 is one of the silliest movies that I have ever seen. While the original was silly enough in its own way, I never felt that it went so over the top in the way that this one does. Elle Woods trying to win her boyfriend back by getting into Harvard is one thing, but Elle Woods trying to push a bill through Congress simply by using her ditzy blonde charm was just too much for me. 59ce067264