Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde

Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde

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5 Responses to “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde”

  1. Tracy says:

    This Movie is the greatest movie of all!!!! Reese has done it again with her preppy, bubbly character, Elle. Totally shows blonde ambition!!! GREAT MOVIE!!! AWESOME!!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Lady Vee says:

    I thought this movie was so funny. I loved this movie! It’s so blonde and pink! I think I might like the first one a little better because it’s so funny and pink and blonde that you just know your sense in fashion right when you see it! I truely don’t want any of your opinions if you disagree with me. So please don’t say you opinion if if it’s a disagreement! I don’t care for your opinion!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Judy Scroggs says:

    this was my first order with amazon. I will definitely use amazon again.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. I had my reservations about seeing the first film of Legally Blonde but my worries were soon oblivious as it was clear that the movie was (as cheesy as it sounds) fun.

    From a simple concept of blondes being the stupid bimbo’s of the earth, we follow the stereotypical social blonde ‘poster girl’ Elle Woods through her melodramas of becoming a law student after being dumped by her boyfriend. Elle Woods gets the drive to join Harvard and start vying to graduate as a fully fledged Law student just to spite her ex-boyfriend.

    The layed back atmosphere the movie creates can hopefully be duplicated in Legally Blonde 2. The ditzy, ‘Clueless’ style of comedy is one of the warmer aspects the film plays out so well. Some comedies rely on plot others rely on performance, I believe that Legally Blonde had a nice equilibrium between the two and is a reason why it has cult Teen following with other such great teen movies.

    Reese Witherspoon, the main star, was a perfect choice for the protagonist of Elle Woods. Reese Witherspoon definately hits the role on the head as she has great comedic timing and is not afraid to make a fool of herself. Her endearing antics and irreplacable facial expressions really gives Elle Woods an aura of her own.

    But what can we expect of a Legally Blonde sequel?! Having a sequel is usually a big gamble or just an easy cash-in. All we can know so far is the general storyline.

    Reese Witherspoon is back as Elle Woods in Legally Blonde 2: Red, White and Blonde. Now Elle is juggling a demanding career as a rising young lawyer as well as preparations for her wedding to the man of her dreams. But when she stands up for the other guy of her life – Bruiser, her chihuahua – Elle is fired from her job.

    She’s devastated but you can’t keep an optimist down. Ms Woods goes to Washington into her own well-manicured hands. Trying to learn the political ropes and win over self-serving politicians. Elle faces a formidable challenge. But with her clever and sassy signature blend of determination and intelligence, she bucks the system the Elle Woods way, inspiring those around her to find a voice of her own.

    We will only find out on July 2nd whether Legally Blonde 2 can live up to the original film and hopefully surpass it.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Tallulah says:

    I really loved the first ‘Legally Blonde’, it’s one of my favourite movies. So I was quite pleased when I heard they were making a sequel because even though sequels aren’t normally that good, I figured more Legally Blonde could hardly be bad!
    I figured wrong.
    Partly, I think it was that the themes of the movie – politics and animal rights – really don’t interest me that much. I would have much preferred LB2 where Elle was still in criminal law as that would have appealed to me a lot more. But another thing I liked about the original movie was the way it prized brains and showed the viewer that just because someone acts fluffy doesn’t mean they actually are. This movie seems to be completely going against that. It’s Elle’s fluff, rather than her brains, which help her to save the day – one part that particularly annoyed me was that after someone accuses animal rights petitioners of using cheap sappiness and cute pictures to get people on their side, Elle goes and does exactly that in her speech for ‘Bruiser’s Law’.
    The humour varied from brilliant (the sorority phone-in) to trying too hard (the whole subplot about Bruiser and the Rottweiler.) The opposition to Elle seemed much vaguer in this film than in the last – Grace is faded out over the second half and seems a completely cardboard character, the congresswoman is won over way too quickly with some sorority connections…basically, I just felt the film-makers missed a golden opportunity and instead chose to play up Elle’s wackiness and ditziness. It wasn’t a completely terrible movie, there were some good parts in it and the cast were impressive, but I wouldn’t recommend it if you aren’t very, very interested in cute lickle fluffy animals. I’m not exactly for animal testing – it depends on what’s being tested – but I resent trying to be won over by sentimental arguments.
    Rating: 2 / 5

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