Are We Done Yet?
Nick (Ice Cube) and Suzanne (Nia Long) decide to move to the suburbs to create a better life for children Lindsey (Aleisha Allen) and Kevin (Philip Bolden). But their idea of a dream home is disturbed by a contractor with a bizarre approach to business.
1976, Managua, Nicaragua
17 May 1986, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
27 January 1976, Luton, Bedfordshire, England, UK
18 August 1971, Michoacan, Mexico
14 August 1959, Lansing, Michigan, USA
28 April 1991, Bronx, New York, USA
17 January 1967, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
19 March 1995, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
3 July 1974, Perth Amboy, New Jersey, USA
30 October 1970, Brooklyn, New York, USA
3 August 1959, New York City, New York, USA
16 April 1977, Chicago, Illinois, USA
1 December 1946, New York City, New York, USA
15 June 1969, Los Angeles, California, USA
June 19, 2007
Basically, the title says it all and if you're unlucky enough to end up seeing this, you'll be repeating that title for the entire 96 minutes. Avoid.June 09, 2007
As unfortunate titles for cynically commercial sequels go, this one's a doozyJune 09, 2007
The only thing in Steve Carr's fatuous movie that earns a few giggles is John C McGinley's silliness as a new-age builder.August 02, 2007
We're finished.April 07, 2007
Even though the cinematic foundation of this cheap prefab fluff is a message of family togetherness, the building materials -- boneheaded behavior, overwrought conflict, treacly sentiment -- have classic dry rot.October 31, 2007
Ice Cube's do-it-yourself sequel is too formulaic.April 07, 2007
It isn't gangsta, but it's winning all the same.May 28, 2007
An acknowledged remake of the old Cary Grant movie Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House. As far as I could tell, that's because everyone involved was inspired by the syllable "Bland" in the title.July 15, 2007
passable but far from inspiredApril 09, 2007
It's just awful. It's beyond awful.April 05, 2007
Fans of the first film can rest assured that a change in the director's chair -- Dr. Dolittle 2 auteur Steve Carr taking over for the presumably indisposed Brian Levant -- has done little to curb the overall tone of slapstick desperation.July 12, 2007
Let's just hope the kids find burping raccoons and crumbling ceilings hilarious.