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Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows (1968)

Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows (1968)
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Having scored big in 1966 with The Trouble With Angels, Columbia Pictures went back for a second bite of the apple with Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows. But it's two years later, and the world of Catholic education depicted in the first movie is confronting a raft of changes on all sides, from within and without. And Mother Simplicia (Rosalind Russell) not only has a new generation of students headed for graduation, but a young, progressive nun, Sister George (Stella Stevens), with whom to lock horns. And if top hell-raisers Marvel Ann (Barbara Hunter) and Rosabelle (Susan Saint James) can't cause her enough headaches to keep her busy, then Sister George will come up with something to get under her skin. The girls' adventures take them cross-country to a Catholic-themed peace rally, on the way to which they encounter mechanical problems with their bus, leading to an overnight stay at a Catholic boys' school and an encounter with some surly bikers; an interlude at a ranch owned by a millionaire (Robert Taylor), and a gradual loosening of the attitudes by the tradition-bound Mother Simplicia. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
Rosalind RussellStella Stevens, (more)
Director(s):
James Neilson
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
G
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows

Having scored big in 1966 with The Trouble With Angels, Columbia Pictures went back for a second bite of the apple with Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows. But it's two years later, and the world of Catholic education depicted in the first movie is confronting a raft of changes on all sides, from within and without. And Mother Simplicia (Rosalind Russell) not only has a new generation of students headed for graduation, but a young, progressive nun, Sister George (Stella Stevens), with whom to lock horns. And if top hell-raisers Marvel Ann (Barbara Hunter) and Rosabelle (Susan Saint James) can't cause her enough headaches to keep her busy, then Sister George will come up with something to get under her skin. The girls' adventures take them cross-country to a Catholic-themed peace rally, on the way to which they encounter mechanical problems with their bus, leading to an overnight stay at a Catholic boys' school and an encounter with some surly bikers; an interlude at a ranch owned by a millionaire (Robert Taylor), and a gradual loosening of the attitudes by the tradition-bound Mother Simplicia. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
94 mins

Complete Cast of Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows


Director(s):
James Neilson
Writer(s):
Blanche Hanalis
Producer(s):
William Frye
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
G(Questionable for Children)
Categories:
Comedy
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    Member Reviews
     
    Timothy A.

    This sequel is a ghost of the hit that the original Trouble With Angels was, and seems to exist mainly as some sort of counter-culture flipside antidote to the first movie, which someone must have felt was needed here to create "balance." Gee, thanks again, Hollywood. Haley Mills is replaced here by a listless no-name actress, and a really young Susan St. James, as mere shadows of the first movie duo. The tension that developed between Mother Superior and Haley's character in the first movie, gives way to tension between Rosalind Russell again and a young radical nun who spends most of her time in full habit protesting (yeah, right). In the first movie, deeply rigid Catholic values are examined as a point of both hilarity and reverence as the "correct" way of doing things, but here, are mocked and under attack from all sides as outdated and wrong. Worth seeing for Rosalind Russell's performance only, and the plot and rest of the film values are trendo 60's progressive trash.

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    Megan H.

    Have to disagree. This movie is wonderful. A classic and worth seeing. Far cleaner than most of the animated stuff out today.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Mindy M.

    We saw the first movie - The Trouble with Angels - with Hayley Mills. It was innocent, funny - my kids loved it. This one was a little too controversial and we didn't care for it.

    Yes   |   No

     
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