SummaryThe crew is back in Barbershop 2. They're all still there in Calvin's shop, this time with Queen Latifah joining the fun as Gina, a stylist at the beauty shop next door. The world changes, but some things never go out of style -- you can still say anything you want at the barbershop. [MGM]
Directed By:Kevin Rodney Sullivan
Written By:Mark Brown, Don D. Scott
Barbershop 2: Back in Business
Metascore
Mixed or Average
59
User score
Mixed or Average
5.8
My Score
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
59
56% Positive
19 Reviews
19 Reviews
41% Mixed
14 Reviews
14 Reviews
3% Negative
1 Review
1 Review
100
Barbershop 2 makes you want to know what happens next. In its own way, it's the Ivory Soap of sequels: 99 and 44/100% pure.
75
A warmhearted and surprisingly ambitious sequel.
70
It ain’t high art, but it is a fun flick.
63
Did I like the film? Yeah, kinda, but not enough to recommend. The first film arrived with freshness and an unexpected zing, but this one seems too content to follow in its footsteps.
58
The first "Barbershop" was no classic but, as so often with sequels, if this were the first there would be no second.
50
The material is hardly original, but the moment is affecting all the same.
30
Cube is still adorable, but the potentially poppin' battle between the shop and big-box competitor Nappy Cuts gets obscured by sloppy chronology and flat, cartoonish politicos.
User score
Mixed or Average
5.8
27% Positive
4 Ratings
4 Ratings
53% Mixed
8 Ratings
8 Ratings
20% Negative
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
May 20, 2019
6
Cube and Cedric are going hand in hand winning over each hurdle, they keep the legacy alive, while business comes in handy. Barbershop 2: Back In Business Kevin Rodney Sullivan, the director, has equally long film to run through. Jumping in the life of these familiar characters who have managed to exceed well enough in terms of capabilities both personally and professionally and yet as the film ages on screen, they have managed to stay the same. This is how excellent their command over the character is, they flaunt at their best and even at their worst. Not accepting to back down, should have been fabricated as their example of prowess but this is a rough town, and things go down pretty bad, pretty soon. And yet they never learn, something that never covers the arc completely on their character which by now, I guess is a scheme to keep coming back as an excuse and well, make money; I mean, it is a Ice Cube production. Queen Latifah, the mixture of rivalry and friendly equation with our folks never could own the trash talk she is offered, the overdoing of that every bit of linguistic slices down the earned respect. But fortunately, these additional appearances are for brief moments, what stays with you is who has stayed with us up till now. It is much more engaging to see an empty room crowded by the range that these revisiting characters needs for nothing but their sassiness. Ice Cube, this time, a bit mature, seeks for guidance to his father-alike figure Cedric who with his own long lost love story, clears all the fuss expressively. This is what I have loved about the series, if it is light footed, it stays by it all the way, even a crisis a big as such could be eradicated through easy mellow methods where the build up matters and not the impact, and that is how they are getting Back In Business.




























