Short Circuit 2 (1988)
Director: Kenneth Johnson
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
If the original Short Circuit brought us a mechanised version of E.T, this sequel is more a chromium Crocodile Dundee. Number Five, a military robot which received the spark of life, turned peacenik, and renamed himself Johnny Five, answers a distress call from his co-creator (Stevens) to join him in the Big City. His naive candour and sociological observations provide simple humour (of punks: 'Whoah! Human porcupines!'), as does his unwitting involvement in a bank robbery; and a terrific set piece is his attempt to prompt love-struck Stevens from afar by way of the '50s manual Dating Dos and Don'ts for Modern Teens. Though the direction by TV veteran Johnson is a little sparing of the big screen, and though the saccharine monitor keeps lurching dangerously into the red, this is that rare thing - a moderately intelligent kids' film, and a sequel that is better than the original. But why, when the theme is the prejudice encountered in Johnny Five's quest for acceptance among humans, is his Indian friend an absurd stereotype played by a blacked-up white actor?Author: DW
Cast & crew
Director: Kenneth Johnson
Producer: David Foster, Lawrence Turman, Gary Foster
Cast: Fisher Stevens, Michael McKean, Cynthia Gibb, Jack Weston, Dee McCafferty, David Hemblen full cast
Genre(s): Children's
Duration: 110 mins
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