Major League 2
A powerful struggle for glory and fame again after the Cleveland Indians lost at ALCS last year. Once again, the team seems determined to reach the lost world chain, but it depends on many challenges. The first is to face Rachel Phelps when he buys the team and threatens to tear the team and the team's training. Jake's knee seems to be able to go back to winning the World Cup and compensate for that loss, as the team replaces that loss with a deserved win.
4 October 1949, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA
1 October 1950, Houston, Texas, USA
11 November 1966, Dublin, Ireland
20 November 1968, Abington, Pennsylvania, USA
17 April 1918
5 May 1962, Clark Air Force Base, Philippines
1962
28 April 1950, New Rochelle, New York, USA
2 July 1970, Chico, California, USA
31 May 1949, Chicago, Illinois, USA
8 November 1959, North Carolina, USA
24 April 1973, Devens, Massachusetts, USA
July 26, 2002
Copies the first one, but forgets the charm and good humor.
May 20, 2003
There has rarely been such a steep and strange decline between a movie and its sequel as the one between the fast, silly original and the dismal, boring Major League II.
August 12, 2009
Generally feels like a case of needless extra innings.
January 01, 2000
You've got to know something is terribly wrong when Bob Uecker's performance is amongst a movie's few high points.
November 07, 2004
Inexplicably outshines the original.
March 26, 2009
A singularly unfunny, dramatically tepid follow-up to 1989's $ 50 million theatrical success.
January 01, 2000
They don't come any fouler than Major League II.
November 06, 2002
A real foul ball; another in a plethora of unnecessary sequels.
January 01, 2000
I expect a certain number of contrivances in a baseball movie, especially one that's not meant to be taken seriously, but nothing prepared me for the sheer avalanche of formulas and cliches that fill the screen in Major League II.
January 01, 2000
This sequel is virtually plotless, episodic and meandering and overloaded with disparate characters.
January 01, 2000
The humor is so predictable, forced and awkward that the actors sometimes seem like helpless bystanders.

