Weekend at Bernies 2
Weekend at Bernies 2 follows accountants/programmers oafish Larry and up-tight Richard as they drag corpse Bernie along for a trip to the Caribbean, where they must race a group of mob members to the stash in order to recover two million dollars.
26 June 1953, Greensburg, Pennsylvania, USA
25 December 1965, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
5 August 1966, Los Angeles, California, USA
29 November 1952, Englewood, New Jersey, USA
24 February 1947, Superior, Wisconsin, USA
11 December 1966, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
19 February 1952, New York City, New York, USA
21 May 1955, Tarrytown, New York, USA
25 February 1966, Savage, Maryland, USA
29 November 1962, New York City, New York, USA
1 August 1939, Omaha, Nebraska, USA
17 December 1939, Brooklyn, New York, USA
4 April 1958, Johnson City, Tennessee, USA
24 February 1945, San Mateo, California, USA
July 14, 2003
Sad sequel to a surprisingly clever dark comedy. The voodoo curse is pointless, and all the funny death moments were used up in teh first one.
May 20, 2003
Through it all, Mr. Kiser, who says not a word, exudes the foolish amiability of a partygoer who is beyond plotzed and is living in a private world of his own.
June 24, 2004
Why would anyone want to be caught dead with Bernie and his banal buddies a second time around? Relentlessly labored and pointless
March 19, 2003
Just as the lead characters try to squeeze more use out of a rotting corpse, so do the filmmakers from this tired premise.
October 10, 2003
Bernie himself is the only sign of life.
March 26, 2009
A mildly diverting farcical caper.
January 01, 2000
If the premise of the first film was mindless and repetitive, it's doubly so this second time around.
August 15, 2003
Frankly I'm stunned that every American who paid to see it didn't file a class action suit against Tri-Star Pictures for their blatant misrepresentation of the word "comedy".
October 16, 2002
Once wasn't enough?
May 15, 2009
At the film's conclusion, unfortunately, Bernie is still a fully animate zombie, leaving open the possibility of a third weekend.
November 05, 2002
At times funny, but more often stupid.
January 01, 2000
I find it hard to believe that many people will pay $6 or $7 to see a picture that has TV sitcom production values, writing, and acting.

