Shortly before I went into sixth grade, my mom and I went school
shopping. We made a day of it, with lunch at Chuck E. Cheese’s and then a
movie. As I recall, our intention was to see Three Ninjas, but the showing was sold out, so we examined our options, and I suggested Sister Act.
Mom was dubious; she didn’t know much about it, and she suspected I
might find it boring. But we gave it a shot, and rarely have I found a
movie so engaging and entertaining. Just a year later, a sequel arrived.
There’s always something lost with a sequel; much of the power of
surprise is gone. You basically know what to expect at this point. A
first film may sweep you away, but a sequel rarely will. Sister Act 2
failed to enthrall me the way the first did, but as sequels go, it was
incredibly well done in spite of the similarities in plot to its
predecessor.
The beginning of this movie finds Delores van
Cartier (Whoopi Goldberg) enjoying greater success as a lounge singer
than ever before, thanks to her unlikely star-making stint as choir
director for a fleet of cloistered nuns. Her habited buddies, Sisters
Mary Robert (Wendy Makkena), Patrick (Kathy Najimy) and Lazarus (Mary
Wickes), corner her after one of her shows and entreat her to return
with them to their current residence, a parish in charge of St. Francis
Academy, a school catering to inner city students. A now gentler Mother
Superior (Maggie Smith) greets her upon her arrival and begs her to join
the teaching staff as a music instructor, to which Delores reluctantly
agrees. Once again she must go in cognito in order to deceive the school
administrators, but this task isn’t so difficult now that most of her
friends know who and what she really is.
The basic plotline is
very similar to the first, though there’s far less at stake for Delores
this time around, and the tensions between her and school principal
Father Maurice (Barnard Hughes) and superintendent Mr. Crisp (James
Cogburn) are nothing compared to the frosty relationship she enjoyed with
Mother Superior in the first film. Delores has changed, so her
motivations are different in this film, and her character doesn’t have
much room to evolve. But once again she finds herself in a position to
save a struggling organization by taking a ragtag group and turning them
into a world-class choir.
Personally, I identify more with
nuns than rowdy teens, so I preferred when the focus was on the Sisters.
Delores had a difficult task in whipping them into shape, but they were
ready and willing to participate. The complications arose much more
from Mother Superior’s disapproval than the nuns themselves. Here,
Delores’ first job is to command her students’ respect, and it’s not
easy. Once she does, though, she still has her work cut out for her in
teaching them how to work together and believe in themselves. Several
students stand out: “Amahl,” (Ryan Toby) who is extremely passionate
about his African heritage and who overcomes his timidity with an
exhilarating solo much as Sister Mary Robert did in the first film;
“Sketch,” (Ron Johnson) a gentle soul who is a talented artist but who
always sleeps through class due to long hours working after school; and
“Frankie,” (Devin Kamin) a wannabe rapper with his own theme song. Most
prominent, however, is Rita (Lauryn Hill), who possesses an
extraordinary voice but has a crummy attitude fostered by her mother
(Sheryl Lee Ralph), who refuses to foster her daughter’s dreams of
singing professionally. Her mother comes across as a bit too severe
here, ordering her to quit the choir because “singing does not put food
on the table;” after all, it doesn’t take food off the table, either. In
fact, Rita seems to have been completely uninterested in school up to
this point, but the choir provides her with motivation. I would think a
mother would be more supportive of her daughter’s talent, but I guess
she’s just seen how hard it is to bring such dreams to fruition and
doesn’t want Rita getting hurt.
When Father Maurice announces
that the school will be closing at the end of the year, the students
rally under the nuns’ enthusiastic suggestion that they enter the
singing contest that this academy has won in years past. Their efforts
are complicated by Father Maurice’s caution and near-sabotage by dour
Mr. Crisp, who stands to gain quite a bit from the destruction of the
school. The last-minute efforts to thwart those plans are an amusing
side-plot involving the monks who also teach at the school. They don’t
have quite as much to do as the nuns, but these men add a lot to the
film. I especially like curmudgeonly Latin teacher Brother Thomas (Brad
Sullivan), Mary Lazarus’ counterpart, and gentle, gregarious math
teacher Brother Ignatius (Michael Jeter), who combines the best
qualities of Mary Patrick and Mary Robert.
The ending is fairly predictable, but the kids’ grand musical number is impressive nonetheless. I can’t help but recall The Sound of Music
while watching the musical competition, and I’m happy to embrace any
film that makes me think of that classic, which may qualify as my
all-time favorite. Of course, it also reminds me of Sister Act. In the end, this sequel is not quite as funny, creative, or surprising as that was, but it comes awfully close.
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