Something went wrong
Try again later.
Barbershop 2: Back in Business
Doing all he can to keep the barbershop in business so he can hand it over to his son, Calvin Palmer gets threatened by a new salon that opened right across his street.
14 September 1953, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
2 February 1932, Orlando, Florida, USA
18 March 1970, Newark, New Jersey, USA
22 March 1976, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
8 February 1970, Chicago, Illinois, USA
October 18, 2008
It's the kind of set-piece ensemble that has proven immensely successful as a sitcom formula but tends to struggle to meet the demands of a movie.
October 07, 2004
Barbershop 2 is a weak, too rarely humorous, too long bore.
December 06, 2005
It ain't high art, but it is a fun flick.
September 30, 2010
Great message delivered in an edgy hip-hop movie.
April 25, 2007
Schoolyard jokes about religious faiths, genetic traits, and sexuality which only work if you enjoy laughing at people because they are darker-skinned, or curlier-haired, or perverted, or have emigrated from another continent.
February 13, 2004
[A]s funny as the original.
April 29, 2009
Manages to throw away everything that made the first film so good.
March 27, 2009
Provides enough solid, character-based amusement to put customers in the chairs and send them out content with services rendered.
February 07, 2004
Like going out for a bad meal with a group of people you love being with. You're happy to be in their company; you just wish you didn't leave feeling hungry.
February 06, 2004
Heartstrings will be tugged and ribs tickled, particularly thanks to Cedric the Entertainer.
February 14, 2004
This sequel is overstaffed with a cast that's underserved by Don D. Scott's schematic script and Kevin Rodney Sullivan's crude direction.
January 26, 2006
Inane banter soon takes over and is not helped by an unlikely, flashback-heavy subplot about Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer) and a lost love.

