Crocodile Dundee 2
The film continues to centers on Mick 'Crocodile' Dundee (Paul Hogan) who demonstrates his outback skills once more when a South American drug dealer (Hechter Ubarry) abducts his girlfriend, Sue Charlton (Linda Kozlowski).
16 September 1918, El Paso, Texas, USA
5 April 1948, Panama City, Panama
28 August 1956, Cayey, Puerto Rico
7 September 1963, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
15 January 1956, Liverpool, England, UK
3 December 1918
22 February 1944, Bronx, New York, USA
17 November 1951, Sarasota, Florida, USA
29 October 1925, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
6 June 1959, Brooklyn, New York, USA
30 January 1951, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
17 October 1956, New York, New York, USA
26 June 1954, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
18 December 1954, Orange, California, USA
2 November 1951, New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA
13 August 1953, New York, USA
31 July 1956, Western Australia, Australia
June 20, 2003
Stick with the first one.
July 29, 2002
"more of the same, with less of the spunk"
July 26, 2002
The most boring comedy I have ever seen.
April 25, 2005
If you're going to make a sequel, make it different.....just as Croc 2 has.
January 16, 2002
Doesn't follow so much as drag itself along like an alligator on dry land.
May 27, 2014
The default strategy for arbitrary sequels is to give audiences what they loved about the first film, in much greater doses. Crocodile Dundee II boldly if idiotically pursues the opposite approach.
January 16, 2002
"'Crocodile' Dundee II" is about as laid-back a movie as you're ever likely to nap through. The actors take forever to recite their lines, and scenes unfold as if the filmmakers had rented the screen by the month.
February 09, 2006
The violence is still pleasantly paddling-pool stuff, but the disarming G'day factor has been pasteurised away.
October 25, 2004
Weak sequel to a pretty fun movie.
May 20, 2003
The earlier one had novelty to keep it going, and this time the novelty has begun to wear thin, even if Mr. Hogan remains generally irresistible.
September 09, 2014
It's audacious in its defiance of expectations, no doubt, but there's no pleasure in the unconventionality.
March 26, 2009
Too slow to constitute an adventure and has too few laughs to be a comedy.

