Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Movie Monday: The House in “Father of the Bride Part II”


by HOOKEDONHOUSES on JUNE 21, 2009

Last week I featured Steve Martin’s traditional white house from Father of the Bride, so I thought it would be fun to take a look at the sequel, Father of the Bride Part II. In this movie, the camera spent more time lavishing attention on the house and giving us a better look into some of the rooms, like the kitchen. Oh, and the baby’s nursery was a wonderful addition–literally.

During the opening credits, the camera slowly pans around the house and yard. We see the white picket fence with the mailbox for 24 Maple Drive:

The tree where they carved their initials:

The hammock in the backyard:

The mudroom and potting center off the kitchen:

The entry hall, looking into the dining room:

This is a corner of the living room we don’t see much, so I snapped a picture of it:

Annie and her mom are both hugely pregnant. In one scene they both looked like they had beach balls under their shirts and Steve Martin narrates that they were only in their second trimester. Yikes. Those are big babies!

Nina’s (Diane Keaton’s) pregnancy was a little hard to believe. She was 50 at the time and reportedly refused to play pregnant after reading the screenplay. She thought it was a little too ridiculous. Nancy Meyers (who co-wrote the script with Charles Shyer) and Keaton’s co-stars had to talk her into it.

The dining room, looking into the entry hall and living room:

George (Steve Martin) and Nina (Diane Keaton) in the master bedroom:

The kitchen:

We didn’t get to see nearly enough of the kitchen in the original film. More time was spent in it this time around, and I was able to get all sorts of angles. I noticed the main thing that changed from the last movie to this one is the tile backsplash. It’s now neutral and beige. Remember how it looked before?

This is the only shot I could get of the back stairs off the kitchen, but I figure it’s better than nothing. I’ve always wanted a back staircase like this:

This scene was kind of dark, but I was excited to get a better look at that massive kitchen island. They’re looking up because the roof is leaking and water is dripping on them. That’s right. In a two-story house, the roof is leaking all the way through the upstairs into the kitchen below. I’d say that’s a serious leak! This is what convinces them to sell the house and start fresh somewhere else.

In this scene, we get a glimpse of what appears to be a wall of windows on the right. That’s an interior wall, however. It’s actually a wall of glass-fronted cabinets that are lit from inside. You may recall we got a glimpse of the green glass inside them in the last film:

I kept hoping they’d give us a better look at the kitchen table. Here’s a glimpse of it behind Annie (Kimberly Williams-Paisley):

Annie’s House:

Annie’s house is no slouch, either. Here’s where the newlyweds are living. Wish I’d had a “starter home” like this! Great front door:

~The “Leave It to Beaver” House

George says his house is “the Leave It to Beaver house that everybody wants.” He expects to sell it right away, but they don’t get any interest–not even a nibble.

Long-story short, George ends up sells it to Mr. Habib, a man who offers him a wad of cash to move out in 10 days (Eugene Levy). Here they are, saying a weepy farewell to “this run-down old shack,” as George calls it. They pan up, the music soars, and the place looks as gorgeous as ever. There’s even a rainbow!

Then he walks back by it a few days later and sees this:

A wrecking ball. The new owner plans to build a new house on the lot. Luckily, George stops him just in the nick of time and pays him $100,000 more than he sold it for, just to save his old house. They move back in and start building an addition for the baby’s room:

I’m not sure why they were so short on space that they needed an entirely new wing for one little baby (couldn’t they use Annie’s old room?), but let’s just go with it.

Franck (Martin Short) greets George when he walks in the door and says the nursery is ready for the Big Reveal:

The set design on these two films is pretty impressive when you consider this was the early 1990s (the first “Father of the Bride” premiered in 1991, and the second in 1995). If the world saw photos of the way I was decorating in 1995, I can just imagine all the snickers.

Visit my TV/Movie Houses page for links to all the others I’ve featured, from Something’s Gotta Give to Housesitter.

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