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Analyze That (2002)

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Analyze That (Widescreen)
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CastYogi Berra, Pat Cooper, Robert De Niro, John Finn, Frank Gio, Billy Crystal, Lisa Kudrow, Cathy Moriarty, Robert DeNiro and Joe Viterelli
Theatrical ReleaseNovember 30, 2001
DVD ReleaseJune 1, 2004
Running Time96 minutes
MPAA RatingR (Restricted)
UPC Code085392341726
Buy this item$12.99 at Amazon.com
As of Sep 4 22:34 EDT (details)
1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
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User Reviews

Average user review: 3.0 (67 reviews)

rating: 3 QuoteAnalyze ThatQuote
Robert DeNiro and Billy Crystal return as mobster Paul Vitti and psychiatrist Dr. Sobel. In five minutes it reminds you of pretty much every running gag from the first movie, in fine fashion. Which is funnier? That's a BS question, Joel Siegel. Both are a pleasure. This film manages to trot out the tired old "gangsters want to make movies about gangsters" gimmick without boring me. I suspect I didn't appreciate Jelly enough the first time around. He's awesome.
August 28, 2006

rating: 3 QuoteWHEN YOU'RE A JET...Quote
Seeing Robert DeNiro sing I FEEL PRETTY from West Side Story in a hospital gown is quite a sight indeed. ANALYZE THAT, the sequel to ANALYZE THIS, reunites DeNiro with fussbudgety Billy Crystal in a fairly entertaining, if often times slow, comedy. DeNiro fakes insanity to get out of prison and Crystal is assigned by the FBI to treat and watch over him. It's fun to watch DeNiro fail at all his "normal" jobs and when he lands a stint as the creative consultant for a tv crime series, his expertise comes in handy for his plot to dismantle rival gangs. Anthony LaPaglia in an uncredited role is hilarious as the Australian star of the series who seeks guidance from DeNiro and Cathy Moriarty-Gentile (De Niro's costar from RAGING BULL) does well in her role as one of the gang's leaders. The late Joe Viterelli is hilarious as DeNiro's sidekick, Jelly, but Lisa Kudrow is pretty bland as Crystal's wife.
DeNiro is proving himself to be a deft comic actor and Crystal does okay too; it's all lightweight and predictable but enjoyable too. February 18, 2006

rating: 1 QuoteANALYZE DEEZ!!!!Quote
I thought the original was pretty good,
but this sequel was pure torture to watch!
I'de rather eat a giant roach, than watch
this movie again! Without question, one of
the worst comedys ever written! March 22, 2005

rating: 4 Quote"Analyze That" ReviewQuote
I don't see the deal with everyone saying it's a bad movie. It's not bad at all, infact I almost perfer Analyze That over Analyze This. If you haven't seen this, I'd reccomend atleast renting it. It doesn't have as many 'laughing out loud' parts, but it still is a great comedy. February 24, 2005

rating: 2 Quote"Back in therapy"Quote
While visiting some family in Utah a few years ago we decided to rent a few movies to pass the unforgivably hot mid-summer weather. We ended up renting "Analyze That" and boy, what a mistake that was! We were expecting at least a mildly funny sequel to 1999's "Analyze This." The potential was there, it's not as if writers (of course it's never a good sign to see numerous writers) Peter Tolan, Peter Steinfeld, and Harold Ramis didn't have decent material to work with; Robert DeNiro, Billy Crystal, Lisa Kudrow, and a funny and entertaining plotline regarding mobsters and therapy. However, this being Hollywood and all, another sequel was botched. It's because of movies like these that sequels have such a bad reputation.

Despite a few genuine laughs in the first twenty minutes or so regarding DeNiro and some "fish out of water" situations, the movie seemed to go downhill soon after. The jokes became few and between as the film laboriously plowed its way through an over-the-top heist setup and execution that felt about as inspired as "Crossroads." Now either they ran out of jokes, they didn't have enough time to invest in an actual story, or the material itself has been played out in so many different ways already ("The Sopranos", "The Whole 9 Yards", "Mickey Blue Eyes", etc. etc.), that there was simply nothing left to write about. January 22, 2005

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