Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit
The holy terror is back!
Deloris Van Cartier is again asked to don the nun's habit to help a run-down Catholic school, presided over by Mother Superior. And if trying to reach out to a class full of uninterested students wasn't bad enough, the sisters discover that the school is due to be closed by the unscrupulous chief of a local authority.
Trailers & Videos

Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993) Trailer
Cast

Whoopi Goldberg
Deloris Van Cartier

Kathy Najimy
Sister Mary Patrick

Lauryn Hill
Rita Louise Watson

Sheryl Lee Ralph
Florence Watson

Maggie Smith
Mother Superior

Barnard Hughes
Father Maurice

Mary Wickes
Sister Mary Lazarus

James Coburn
Mr. Crisp

Michael Jeter
Father Ignatius

Wendy Makkena
Sister Mary Robert

Robert Pastorelli
Joey Bustamente

Thomas Gottschalk
Father Wolfgang

Brad Sullivan
Father Thomas

Alanna Ubach
Maria

Ryan Toby
Wesley Glen 'Ahmal' James

Jennifer Love Hewitt
Margaret

Devin Kamin
Frankie

Pat Crawford Brown
Choir Nun

Susan Browning
Choir Nun

Edith Diaz
Choir Nun
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
The "Reverend Mother" (Dame Maggie Smith) seeks out the now hugely successful "Deloris" (Whoopi Goldberg) to help her to save a school from closure. Upon arrival, and assumption of her clerical moniker "Sister Mary Clarence" she discovers a disparate band of students who have little faith in themselves, each other - or their teachers. Can she lick them into shape and use their newly formed choir to save the school from the bulldozers? The premiss is not a patch on the first film, and neither is the execution. Dame Maggie offer a few classy cameo roles, as does an on form Mary Wickes with James Coburn appearing occasionally as the ferret-like administrator determined to help ensure the school does actually close, but for the most part this is akin to an early episode of "Fame". The kids, including an early appearance from Lauryn Hill, are almost auditioning - either to the nuns or to the audience, and even the ending is just a little like the end of "the Sound of Music" (only admittedly, somewhat livelier!). It's not terrible, but somehow it misses the faux-menace of the first in the series. It was made very quickly after that first one, so i wonder if this was more about capitalising on that success rather than making a quality sequel?
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