Mannequin Two: On the Move

Summary

Mannequin Two: On the Move is a 1991 romantic comedy film and a sequel to the 1987 film Mannequin. The film stars Kristy Swanson as a "peasant girl" named Jessie who is enchanted by an evil sorcerer's magic necklace, freezing her in the form of a wooden mannequin. She is to remain frozen for one thousand years, or until the necklace is removed by the person who will be her true love. In modern day Philadelphia, she is freed by Jason Williamson (William Ragsdale), a new employee of the Prince & Company department store and the descendant of Jessie's original love. The two fall in love while avoiding Count Spretzle (Terry Kiser), the descendant of the evil sorcerer.

Mannequin Two: On the Move
Theatrical release poster
Directed byStewart Raffill
Written by
Produced byEdward Rugoff
Starring
CinematographyLarry Pizer
Edited by
  • John Rosenberg
  • Joan E. Chapman
Music byDavid McHugh
Production
company
Distributed by20th Century Fox[1]
Release date
  • May 17, 1991 (1991-05-17)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$13 million[1]
Box office$3.8 million[1]

The original film's theme song "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" by Starship, written by Diane Warren and Albert Hammond, was featured in this film. The original music score was composed by David McHugh. Though the sequel takes place in the same Philadelphia department store Prince & Company as the original film, only actors Mesach Taylor and Andrew Hill Newman returned from the original film. Taylor reprises the role of Hollywood Montrose and briefly references having witnessed a similar romance during the first film.

Plot edit

In the year 1391, Prince William of the small Germanic kingdom of Hauptmann-Koenig falls in love with a peasant girl named Jessie. Not approving of the romance, the queen plots with her court sorcerer Spretzel, who enchants a necklace intended for Jessie. Putting on the necklace, she is transformed into a wooden statue and the magic prevents William from freeing her. He is told Jessie will be frozen for a thousand years and can only wake earlier if a true love from another land removes the necklace. Angry, William declares the kingdom will then also be cursed for a thousand years. Perpetual rainfall begins.

600 years later in 1991, Hauptmann-Koenig is a poor country enduring endless rain and financial hardship. Jessie stands as a museum piece in the castle, where a tour guide recites the fairy tale of the "Enchanted Peasant Girl". To boost tourism, Count Gunther Spretzle sends the statue to be displayed at a dramatic stage presentation at the Prince & Company department store in Philadelphia, celebrating the Hauptman-Koenig's history and culture. Spretzle is secretly the descendant of the sorcerer, and plots to use the fairy tale to make a soon-to-be awakened Jessie his bride and then escape to Bermuda with his henchmen, using stolen crown jewels to fund his retirement.

In the Germantown section of Northwest Philadelphia, Jason Williamson, the reincarnation of William, lives with his mother who runs a matchmaking service. He begins work at Prince & Company where store manager Mr. James makes him assistant to visual merchandising head Hollywood Montrose, who is directing the Enchanted Peasant Girl presentation. When the delivery truck with the Hauptmann-Koenig artifacts crashes over the Schuylkill River, Hollywood and James arrive on the scene. Seeing a female figure fall into the river, Jason saves her, only then realizing it is the statue from Europe, and obliviously restores Jessie to life briefly by touching her necklace. Romantically drawn to Jessie, he takes her to the store, where he removes her necklace with ease and is shocked when she comes to life. Learning she is in the future, Jessie concludes Jason is William reincarnated. Jason shows Jessie the modern world and they have a whirlwind romance, sharing their feelings, dreams, and cultures with each other. The next morning, unaware of its magic, Jessie puts on her necklace and is frozen again. Heartbroken and unsure what to do, Jason returns the statue to the store.

Admiring Jessie's necklace, Hollywood tries it on, becoming a statue and restoring her to life. Jessie leaves to explore the mall. Spretzle's henchmen find Hollywood, remove the necklace, then rush to find Jessie. The Queen of Hauptman-Koenig then calls Spretzle, warning him she knows the crown jewels are missing. Jason finds Hollywood and explains Jessie came to life; Hollywood believes him as this had happened two years prior. Recognizing Jason as William reincarnated, Spretzle tries to kill him. Seeing Spretzle's henchmen, Jessie takes a go-kart and escapes to Jason's home, only for Spretzle and the authorities to follow Jason there. The count confronts Jessie alone and puts the necklace on her. Seeing her frozen again, Jason realizes the necklace is cursed and demands it be removed. The cops, believing he is unhealthily fixated on a mannequin, arrest him for theft. Spretzle wants to leave with Jessie but James reminds him of the presentation for the next day.

The next day, Hollywood dresses in his former US Marine Corps uniform and bluffs a policeman into releasing Jason into his custody. At the Enchanted Peasant Girl presentation, Jason removes Jessie's necklace on stage, restoring her to life in front of spectators who assume it is part of the show. Enraged, Spretzle takes Jessie and forces her into his hot air balloon. Jason follows and they struggle. Jessie puts the necklace on Spretzle, repeating the ancient curse. The now-frozen Spretzle is knocked out of the balloon and smashes into pieces on the street.

Later in Hauptmann-Koenig, the glued together Spretzle statue is the castle centerpiece and inspires his own fairy tale. Meanwhile, newly-married Jason and Jessie pick up a new necklace at Prince & Company before leaving on their honeymoon.

Cast edit

Production edit

The first film had been financially successful and the production company wanted a sequel. A script was written and David Begelman hired Stewart Raffill, who had made The Ice Pirates (1984) for Begelman earlier, to direct.[2] Raffill said his philosophy was "just to play the humor" and look for interesting reactions to the situations.[2] Filming took place in Philadelphia at Wanamaker's department store. Raffill said that Swanson "was a charm to work with".[2]

Soundtrack edit

Track list: Mannequin Two: On the Move [3]
Title: Performed by: Produced by: Courtesy of: Composed by:
"Do It For Love" Gene Miller Phil Galdston
John Van Tongeren
John Van Tongeren
Phil Galdston
"Wake Up" Gene Miller Phil Galdston
John Van Tongeren
John Van Tongeren
Phil Galdston
"Can't Believe My Eyes" Gene Miller Jon Lind John Bettis
Jon Lind
"Pick Up the Pieces (To My Heart)" Cindy Valentine Tony Green
for TGO Records, Ltd.
Arista Records, Inc. Cindy Valentine
Tony Green
"Casa De Coati" Meshach Taylor
Coati Mundi
Coati Mundi Coati Mundi
"The Sea Hawk" Erich Wolfgang Korngold
"Feel the Way I Do" Shoes Shoes Black Vinyl Records John Murphy
"That Love Thang" E*I*E*I*O Phil Bonanno & E*I*E*I*O Frontier Records Richard Szeluga
David Kendrick
"Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" Starship Narada Michael Walden RCA Records Albert Hammond
Diane Warren

Reception edit

Unlike its predecessor, it was a box office bomb, grossing just less than $4 million against its $13 million budget.[1]

On Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 13% based on reviews from 23 critics, with the critic consensus being “Chock full of clichéd gags and glaring product placement, Mannequin: On the Move is even more lifeless than its woeful predecessor.”[4] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "B" on scale of A+ to F.[5] This sequel was dubbed as "one of the worst follow-ups ever made."[6]

Variety gave it a negative review: "It took four writers to struggle with another idea of why a mannequin would come to life in a department store and what would happen if she did."[7] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called it "even more feeble than the original" and "insipid in the extreme".[8]

David Cornelius of DVD Talk called it "as woefully incompetent as its predecessor".[9]

Home media edit

Mannequin Two: On the Move was first released on VHS and LaserDisc in 1992 by Live Home Video. MGM Home Entertainment released the film to DVD for the first time on January 16, 2008 as part of a double feature two-disc set with the first Mannequin as the first disc.[9] Mannequin Two: On the Move was released on Blu-ray for the first time by Olive Films (under license from MGM) on September 22, 2015.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Mannequin Two: On the Move at Box Office Mojo
  2. ^ a b c Blake Harris (15 July 2016). "Interview with Stewart Raffill Part 2". Slashfilm.
  3. ^ "Soundtracks for". Mannequin: On the Move. Internet Movie Database. 1991. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  4. ^ "Mannequin 2: On the Move (1991)". Rotten Tomatoes. 15 April 2008. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  5. ^ "Cinemascore". Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  6. ^ "Kim Cattrall, Andrew McCarthy's Mannequin set for remake". Zee News. 11 January 2010. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
  7. ^ Variety Staff (1 January 1991). "Mannequin on the Move". Variety.
  8. ^ Kevin Thomas (20 May 1991). "MOVIE REVIEWS : 'Mannequin Two' Is a Dummy Too". Los Angeles Times.
  9. ^ a b David Cornelius (April 15, 2008). "Mannequin & Mannequin 2: On the Move". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  10. ^ "Mannequin Two: On the Move". Amazon.com. 22 September 2015.

External links edit

  • Mannequin Two: On the Move at IMDb  
  • Mannequin Two: On the Move at AllMovie