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  • ruinously1 March 2005
    A Very Brady Sequel is a very good movie. All the actors did well here, especially Shelly Long, Gary Cole, Jennifer Elise Cox and Tim Mathieson. The funny situations, quotes, tone and style of this movie help hide the fact that not all that much really happens and the premise of this film is absurd.

    One of the biggest questions that fans often had about the show was the taboo subject of whether any of the Brady kids hooked up. A Very Brady Sequel tackles this issue head-on with Greg and Marcia trying to decide whether they should give in to the urges they start to feel for each other. This whole subplot was very interesting, if not also a little uncomfortable at times. Christopher Daniel Barnes and Christine Taylor are great as Greg and Marcia.

    The one role that I felt was perfectly done and helped the movie out the most is Jennifer Elise Cox as Jan Brady. She does an even better job with the role then the original Jan, Eve Plumb. Almost all the scenes with Jan are funny and Jennifer just shines through.

    Obviously, fans of The Brady Bunch are going to get the most enjoyment out of this. For a newcomer, you might want to check out a few episodes of the TV show first.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Brady Bunch Movie that was released a couple years prior to A Very Brady Sequel was a decent success. The movie was actually pretty funny, I was obsessed with it when I was a kid. As I grew up, there was a flaw that I found with the film, the point of that film was to show how the Brady's were so different from the world and the real life family, no matter what decade. The Brady Bunch Movie was missing one main thing, the reactions from others around them. So A Very Brady Sequel, that's not only what they did, but they did it extremely well and this movie is one of the funniest comedies that you will ever see.

    One evening, a man claiming to be Carol's long-lost first husband, Roy Martin, shows up at the suburban Brady residence. He is actually a con man named Trevor Thomas and is there to steal their familiar horse statue that is actually a $20 million ancient artifact. They, portrayed as naïve, believe his story about suffering from amnesia and having plastic surgery after being injured. Eventually, Trevor's ruse is uncovered by Bobby and Cindy; in retaliation, he kidnaps Carol and takes her and the artifact to a buyer in Hawaii. The remaining Brady family travels to Hawaii to save her and foil his plans.

    One of the scenes that nearly kills me with laughter each time is when Roy is taking Carol and tells the kids to stay back, Cindy says "You can't take my mommy!", Marcia says "Cindy's right, take Jan!". You rarely get comedic timing on a joke like that! Roy's reactions to hanging with the Brady family was too funny. I loved when Alice mistakes his "mushrooms" for actual mushrooms and as he's eating them in the spaghetti she made he realizes that he's "tripping with the Brady's". Leading into a very funny cartoon of an acid trip with the Brady's. I thought the touch with Marcia and Greg having a romance was funny since every Brady fan knows that in real life Maureen McCormick and Barry Williams had a little fling, weird seeing brother and sister have that kind of chemistry on camera.

    A Very Brady Sequel is guaranteed to make you laugh. It's just a fun comedy with a lot of fun pokes at the series. The cast was great and really clicked well. Adding Tim Matheson as Roy was a great idea, he's timing on the jokes was perfect. His character was exactly what these movies needed. I also thought it was a great idea taking on the famous Hawaii episode, how could you not laugh at the way Greg gets "wiped out" again while surfing? I wish they did make another sequel, but maybe it's better to leave the movies off with a bang, keep us laughing, keep us wanting more because the Brady's can finally rest knowing that they left that audience with a smile on their faces.

    7/10
  • A VERY BRADY SEQUEL was the 1996 sequel to THE BRADY BUNCH MOVIE which tries to touch upon all the episodes of the classic TV series that the first movie didn't. The paper-thin premise of this sequel centers on the appearance of a shady con-man (Tim Matheson) who arrives on the Bradys' doorstep claiming to be Carol's long-lost first husband, who, according to this film's opening scene, was lost at sea. The con-man is really there to get his hands on a statue that has sat in the background of every episode of the TV show and we now learn that it is part of a set and worth a lot of money. But the funniest part of this movie for me is a subplot in which after Roy's arrival, Greg (Christopher Daniel Barnes) and Marcia (Christine Taylor) learn they may not be brother and sister and start lusting after each other. This is, of course, a knowing nod to all those who have read Barry Williams' book GROWING UP BRADY where he confesses to having been madly in love with Maureen McCormick and had trouble looking at her in a sisterly way when they were working. This movie addresses this in a hysterical scene where Greg and Marcia are sharing the room in the attic and start undressing in silhouette. This scene is cleverly shot and perfectly performed by Barnes and Taylor. The rest of the cast has settled comfortably into their roles for this sequel, especially Gary Cole, who is just spooky as Robert Reed as Mike Brady and Jennifer Elise Cox, who steals every scene she is in as Jan. The fun peters out before a truly lame finale, but for true fans, there is fun to be had here.
  • liammurphy117 January 2004
    This quick cash-in sequel to the 1995 Brady Bunch Movie is surprisingly really quite good - The wonderfully tongue-in-cheek Shelley Long and Gary Cole make this worth watching just for their performances alone and the story is quite good if a little far-fetched. Tim Matheson stars as Shelley Long's EX-Husband or is he? If your feeling low - this movie will certainly bring a smile to the face if nothing else!

    MY Rating 8/10
  • Okay, I'm glad that they made a sequel to the original film. In this film, Carol's first husband, Roy Martin, supposedly returns to reunite with his beautiful wife and three blonde daughters. Unfortunately, he's not who or what he appears to be. He seems trapped in Brady's world where cable television is far too out there for them and where dysfunctional seems to be the norm. Greg and Marcia get new digs in the attic with creepy sexual tension between them while Jan fakes a new boyfriend. I love the coffee house scene where Greg and Marcia are double dating and where Jan and her fake boyfriend show up. Well, the fake first husband is only after Carol to get a horse that could pay him 20 million dollars to Hawaii to the anxious buyer. Yes, the plane ride to Hawaii is one to remember. There's singing and dancing and those Bradys are at it again. It's just a fun film to watch over and over. Nothing serious!
  • If you're familiar with the classic tv show the Brady Bunch then this is a comedy for you. A movie full of funny references and humour that will entertain you for a whole night. Although nothing to take seriously, nor something that could be classed as cinematic masterpiece, A Very Brady Sequel is a lighthearted and fun movie for the whole family to enjoy.
  • StevePulaski15 September 2012
    After The Brady Bunch Movie was a surprisingly success in 1995, just a year later, A Very Brady Sequel was made, continuing the line of Brady Bunch movies that were paying homage to the original series, but also lampooning them by parodying their cheeriness and their persistent nice-ness.

    In my original review of The Brady Bunch Movie, which I did in song (I also planned to do this one in song as well, but we all need to be serious sooner or later), I took the original Television show's theme song and rewrote the lyrics to replicate my thoughts on the film. I said in the third verse, "And if one day I'm strick-en with cyni-cism. And you look onto this review as not groovy. You can go on to not trust me. After I enjoyed The Brady Bunch Movie." I suppose the same line is valid in this review too. I'm not necessarily proud that I enjoyed both film adaptations, but there are times when we can not help what we liked. Again, from the first frame, I enjoyed the Brady's overwhelming eccentricities.

    The storyline is pure simplicity; the Brady's are stuck in the seventies while the whole world has kindly shifted into the nineties, therefore, capturing the idea that the Brady's, while timeless, are also pretty outdated. Mike Brady (reprised by Gary Cole) is contemplating what to give his darling gold-haired wife, Carol (Shelley Long) for their anniversary, but in the nick of time, a man claiming to be Carol's first husband named Roy (Tim Matheson) shows up and tries to win Carol back. In reality, he's a snaky con-man, searching for a statue of a marble horse.

    While the family naively welcomes Roy back home, Greg is hasty about the whole thing, yet never questions if something is really behind this alleged miracle. It is never truly said, however, how Roy managed to know all there was to know about the family, but nevermind that small little detail. The subplots follow other Brady characters, as expected, such as Jan trying to boast to the family about her new boyfriend, "George Glass" (who is imaginary), Marcia and Peter possibly falling in love, and the family traveling to Hawaii in the latter half of the picture.

    Again, much like the original film, the whole idea and premise is a little anarchic, but not to the point of utter senselessness. We do not get much in the area of outsider reactions, but we didn't in the first one either, so perhaps it wasn't the filmmaker's prime intent. There are certain pictures we can not help but like, and The Brady Bunch films are two of mine. They're silly, deranged, yet deeply, weirdly satisfying and self-aware - the best part of all.

    Starring: Gary Cole, Shelley Long, Tim Matheson, Henriette Mantel, Christopher Daniel Barnes, Christine Taylor, Paul Sutera, Jennifer Elise Cox, and Jesse Lee Soffer. Directed by: Arlene Stanford.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Fans of the original series divide on this take-off of the show where Carol's original husband shows up alive, apparently looking for a lost treasure that could lead to a lot of money. The only good thing about it is that it would mean Greg and Marcia aren't really siblings anymore as they FINALLY realize what growing up means to their bodies.

    As with the first movie, some of the show's original scenarios are also played out, including Greg moving up to the attic, dating his sister's rival for cheerleader captain, as well as Marcia dating his rival on the basketball squad. Peter goes to work at his father's firm (I thought it was Greg who got the job in the original series), Jan still deals with her personal insecurities, Bobby becomes a junior detective, and Cindy is still obsessed with her doll.

    The only good thing that they got the rest of the scenarios in from the original series is that it means there won't be another sequel starring this clan of a misplaced family, stuck in the 70's.

    2 out of 10 stars is a gift, in my opinion.
  • This satiric sequel is a rare exception--it's better than the original. Highlights include Jan's made-up boyfriend, George Glass, Marcia and Greg's awkward sexual attraction, a cameo by Zsa Zsa Gabor and Rosie O'Donnel, not one but TWO musical dance numbers, Marcia's obvious wig in her scene at the pool, Jan losing her contact lens while driving, Mr. and Mrs. Brady's hilariously obvious sexual innuendo, Alice's spaghetti with "special mushrooms," the family trip to Hawaii, and the (brief) return of Tiger, the dog. There's a lot more funny stuff too!

    While the original was all about the Brady's living in the 90s, the sequel is more concerned with the wacky misadventures the characters get themselves into. The comedy is intensified when other non-Brady's (people of the 90s) react to the Brady family. Fortunately, the Brady's are still oblivious to the fact that they aren't living in the 1970's anymore, so we can keep on laughing at the ridiculousness of the situations they are placed in.

    Honestly, it is such a funny, underrated comedy...RENT IT!
  • Another hilarious effort here, and once again the references from the TV show spring up all over the place. Pretty creative how they made that ugly, ever-present horse statue near the staircase the focal point of the movie, with Tim Matheson (who ironically portrayed the oldest child in the "Yours, Mine and Ours", the late '60s movie that inspired the whole Brady Bunch thing to begin with!) claiming to be Carol Brady's long-lost first husband so he can claim that "valuable" statue as his own. Heck, they even managed to incorporate the Brady Kids cartoon into the movie with the hysterical "Tripping with the Bradys" sequence (complete with Ping and Pong the pandas and Marlon the magic mynah bird!). If there's ever going to be a third Bunch movie, here's hoping they incorporate the short-lived Variety hour into it (featuring Greg pushing Peter into the swimming pool!) and maybe even a special appearance by Martha Quinn!
  • Bright, easy-to-take follow-up to 1995's "The Brady Bunch Movie", a spot-on (if not especially hilarious) send-up of the kitschy '70s TV series about a widower with three boys who marries a single mother with three girls. The television show never explained what happened to Carol Brady's first husband, which is the engaging starting point for this plot. Tim Matheson shows up claiming to be the long-lost father of Marcia, Jan and Cindy--but is he an imposter? Has the same wonderful sets and color schemes from the 1995 movie, and the same cast is reassembled in high style, but the basic problems from before remain: weak, repetitive gags and in-jokes stolen from the TV show retold without any irony (only camp value). Mixture of silly, harmless laughs and groaners make the results enjoyable for fans, but intolerable to anyone else. ** from ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I hated the original "Brady Bunch"--the show was totally saccharine and about as edgy as a basketball! When the Brady movie came out in 1995, I was thrilled--as the saccharine Brady family was gone and the movie had a wonderful way of making fun of itself. Because of this good-natured lampoon, I was excited to see the sequel--and it did not disappoint--being MUCH better, even, than the previous film.

    Here, the plot is much sillier and the film is much more daring--going some sick places that the last film never dared. Jan is back--and even crazier than before and simply a hoot. And, there is a totally sick plot involving Marsha and Greg that had me falling on the floor laughing.

    One of the only reservations about the film is that it, unlike the TV show, there is some family-unfriendly humor. It was very, very funny and welcome...but not for the younguns. The other is that to enjoy and appreciate the film, you really need to have seen the original show. If you never saw the show, you will miss a lot of the references and won't enjoy it nearly as much. So, as a result, here is how I rate the film: 9 if you've seen the original show and hated it and 7 if you've never seen it and 2 if you LOVE the original show and can't imagine anyone lampooning this 'pure genius' (yeah, right).

    The
  • Warning: Spoilers
    In spite of myself, I laughed hard at this one and I thought it was rather creative. The repressed sexuality between Greg and Marcia, the dangerous possibilities that could stem from middle sister jealousy and what could happen if an ex-spouse arrived, were all topics of discussion for fans of the original series and are all touched on, rather comically, here.

    My problems were the cameos from all of the creative and funny performers who were, in no way related to the original Brady Bunch. The first film had a half dozen smart, carefully placed classic bits by actors from the original show, not to mention Davy Jones.

    I love Barbara Eden and it was great to see her, looking as exquisite as ever in her harem outfit. However, once it was established that Carol's ex-husband was a professor who had disappeared on the same boat as Gilligan, I think the last line, at Carol and Mike's wedding renewal ceremony, should have come from Russell Johnson: "Honey, I've been rescued!" After the plotline involving the return of Carol's would be but ultimately fake former spouse, this would have been the perfect wholesome sitcom ending.

    It should be noted, of course that Sherwood Schwartz, who was alive and quite well at the time of this film, had created both The Brady Bunch and Gilligan's Island.
  • "A Very Brady Sequel" lacked what made the first one funny and entertaining. In "The Brady Bunch Movie" the most laughs were garnered through the time warped Bradys and the rest of society. They didn't have that same interaction this time around except through the scheister, Trevor Thomas (Tim Matheson). He wasn't their only real world interaction, but he constituted the bulk of their real world interaction.

    They also explored a taboo area with a potential romance between Greg (Christopher Daniel Barnes) and Marcia (Christine Taylor) Brady. It was funny at first then it got weird. So, for me, the sequel is a thumbs down although it's not horrible.
  • This movie is one of the funniest films I've ever seen. Way better than the first which is very unlikely. This movie just makes you laugh from the first frame to the very last. Not much more to say, a perfect comedy.
  • Although both Brady movies are entertaining, the sequel is easily the better of the two. The plot works in a lot of things from the old tv show that are fun to spot. It's fun to poke fun at the Bradys, yet there's a sort of sweetness to the family unity thing too. The talented Gary Cole is uncanny as Mike Brady. This is a fun, lightweight film.
  • Still super weird (sibling love) and sporadically funny ("scule"), but so much of the fish-out-of-water stuff that made the original a modern classic is gone. Also, Tim Matheson is far too aware and winky.
  • Sequel to the 1995 "Brady Bunch movie". It seems in this one Carol Brady's (Shelley Long) dead husband Roy (Tim Matheson) turns up alive and well. It seems he wasn't killed in a shipwreck years ago and had amnesia for a long time before gaining his memory back. However he's back and still in love with Carol...but she's married to Mike (Gary Cole) and has six kids.

    There's no way this could be as good as the first but it still more or less works. There are plenty of laugh out loud funny moments even if they do repeat themselves from the first movie. Also the subplot about Greg and Marcia finding each other hot is kind of sick. I know they're not biologically related but still... Still I was entertained but there really was no reason for this sequel.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A Very Brady Sequel (1996): Dir: Arlene Sanford / Cast: Shelley Long, Gary Cole, Tim Matheson, Christopher Daniel Barnes, Christine Taylor: Every bit as dumb as The Brady Bunch Movie only far worse and dirtier. When a priceless statue is uncovered it somehow ends up in the Brady home. It seems to be a routine day. The two youngest children play detective to find a missing doll. Dad brings middle son to the job site. Mother gets her hair done. Jan pretends to have a secret boyfriend. Greg and Marcia argue as to who will shack up in the attic. Then Tim Matheson shows up claiming to be Carol's first husband but he is really there to find the statue. Ads emphasize Hawaii but only the last twenty minutes take place there. The relationship between Greg and Marcia all but screams incest. Director Arlene Sanford fails to realize the sitcom for what it was and as a result we are subject to humour that would not have in the series. With that said fans of the sitcom will no doubt find this film offensive. As for the cast, Gary Cole and Shelley Long are cardboard as Mike and Carol in all their happy flare. Matheson plays a cardboard villain who grows to detest the glee and sing-song attitude of this family. The children are reduced to horny teenage updates primped to be the next tabloid fix. The result is a pointless escapade that should be buried. Score: 1 / 10
  • Another of the rare breed of sequels-better-than-the-original movies, A Very Brady Sequel continues with the idea of the 70's Brady's being stuck in the present (in this case, the mid-90's) from the first film. While the original movie was very funny (grunge music nonwithstanding), the total lack of a plot was a pretty obvious hole.

    This time around we're actually treated to a decent storyline (as relative as can be to the entire Brady aura, that is) involving Mrs. Brady's first, long-lost husband, Roy. This adds a whole additional avenue for laughs as we now have an straight outsider thrust directly into the everyday realm of the Bradys. As he tries to enact his nefarious scheme, he's dragged kicking and screaming through their loopy antics, breakout songs and Mr. Brady's lectures.

    The same Brady cast returns and they're as spot-on as ever. A bulk of the laughs continue to go to insecure Jan, as she tries to convince everyone she's a viable person. A new "incest" angle is introduced between Greg and Marcia ("Does this mean we're not really brother and sister?") that plays very well throughout. Tim Matheson is an excellent addition as Roy Brady, and he gets some scene stealing parts as well, particularly when he ends up "tripping with the Bradys".

    While Sam seems to have disappeared in this one, we do see a couple of other Brady icons who seemed to have been missed in the first movie, though blink and you'll miss them. Surprisingly no real-life cameos in this one.

    As with the first movie, the more familiar you are with the TV series the more you will enjoy this movie. If you've never watched the Bradys then you'll probably want to skip these movies as most of the laughs are derived from inside references to the episodes, but if you have, then this is highly recommended and one of my faves.
  • i think that its not the best sequel and its kinda stupid but its still a great movie for Brady Bunch lovers. but its a really good story. the lines could of bean not as cheesy but whatever thats what makes the scenario funny. its a movie that you could watch with kids because there's no ''bad words'' and nothing thats not proper except one little kiss but who cares ... its actually maybe not a movie for like 4 years old but its a movie for like 7 and over and its in between a general and pg movie...you and you're kids will love it !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! so you have to watch this movie its great. give this movie a chance because i am sure that you will fall in love with it !!!!
  • Greg & Marcia Attracted to each other is sick ,s-i-c-k, sick yes that's right even though they're not blood related it's still sick not only as a coworker of mine from my old theater job agreed & of which is why she'd never think of falling in love with her step brother but along with how it's not right when they're brought up under the same roof but as another old coworker of mine of whom is a lead usher agreed about & as I'd explained to him was a very good point as Carol explained to Bobby on the TV Show "The only steps in this house are those the ones that go up to your bedroom now you get up there right now."Maybe as many reviews that I've heard & read said that this was better than the first as even my sister Elaine thought but as I even told her that "I personally don't think so." Also maybe there were some good recreations as in the first one & I did like the Moesha sequence of which the loose base on reality is that when least expected you see reflections of yourself & others in others as even I've also had experienced.I also liked Mike's Punch of which showed a sudden face of Mike of which we'd never seen before even on the TV Show but other than these this also goes too far with Greg & Marcia attracted to each other. Normally the Brady Bunch is Stevie's favorite family but not this time around,sad to say but still very much so.This movie is also really so very agreeably A Very Sorry Sequel.Let's see more of the original cast in another TV-Reunion Movie as well as an edited version of this one without having Greg & Macia being attracted to each other.

    Truthfully Stephen "Steve" G. Baer a.k.a. "Ste" of Framingham,MA.USA
  • There may be some who might think that this movie is nasty in how it approaches Greg and Marcia's relationship. Yes, they are step-brother and step-sister, although that's as far as they're related. They are not blood related, so technically there can't really be anything sick about it. The whole idea about them having "almost intimate" moments in the movie is because it was an obvious way for the producer(s) to poke fun at the show. On the show, Greg and Marcia got along a little "too well" for step-children. If you noticed this in the show, as well as all the other quirks with the Brady clan (not excluding Alice), then you should watch this movie. I found it hilarious mainly because I thought the show was incredibly cheesy. This movie also closes some of the chapters that were left open with the show. For instance...whatever happened to that dog the Brady's had? And there's a prequel to this movie too. It's also a good movie. You just got to have a good sense of humor to enjoy the jokes and low-brow fun.
  • It turns out that the horse statue in the Brady family living room is a priceless artifact unbeknownst to the Bradys. The gang is back with the same satirical take on the 70s TV family. Tim Matheson plays the mysterious man who shows up claiming to be Carol Brady's first husband Roy. Carol doesn't recognize him but he claims to be disfigured by an elephant. Everybody buys into the story as he tries to steal the horse.

    The gang is still fun satire but Tim Matheson adds nothing to the movie. The setup needs to be more natural and not so stupid. The family should be the only ones doing silly things. Also they keep pushing Marcia and Greg together. Everything is just a little bit too awkward. The first Brady Bunch movie is much more in keeping with the ideas of the original TV show.
  • Sequel to The Brady Bunch Movie. The Brady's meet a man called Roy Martin who claims to be carol's lost husband. But this man turns out to be an imposter . . .

    Nice concept, but it just didn't work for this movie (although funnier than the Brady Bunch Movie). But still a nice try to make a parody of not only the 1964 Brady Bunch series, but also of the whole "American Dream" concept of the late 60's.

    So my advise to you: watch this movie only in combination with alcohol, then you probably get a good laugh out of it. Or you can concentrate on one of Hollywood's worst: Shelley Long. Cause her acting performance in this movie is also worth a few good laughs.
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