The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement

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"The Princess Diaries 2" redirects here. The Princess Diaries 2 may also refer to the novel The Princess Diaries, Volume II: Princess in the Spotlight.
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement
Directed by Garry Marshall
Produced by Whitney Houston
Written by Meg Cabot (characters)
Shonda Rhimes
Starring Anne Hathaway
Julie Andrews
John Rhys-Davies
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures
Release date(s) 11 August 2004 (USA)
Running time 113 min.
Language English
Budget US$40,000,000
IMDb profile

The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement is the 2004 sequel to 2001's The Princess Diaries.

Anne Hathaway, Julie Andrews, Hector Elizondo, and Heather Matarazzo return to portray their characters from the first Princess Diaries film, Princess Mia Thermopolis, Queen Clarisse Renaldi, Joe (Mia's bodyguard) and Lilly Moscovitz, respectively. Garry Marshall returned to direct and Debra Martin Chase to produce the sequel.

New characters include Viscount Mabrey (John Rhys-Davies), Lord Nicholas Devereaux (Chris Pine, in his film debut) and Andrew Jacoby (Callum Blue).

Contents

[edit] Plot

In the film, Mia Thermopolis journeys to Genovia for vacation after graduating from college before taking up her job as princess of Genovia. She continues her royalty lessons and prepares herself to take up the throne as queen of Genovia. However, the Viscount Mabrey, who wants his nephew to rule as king, brings up a little known--and rarely enforced--law that a princess must marry before taking the throne. The Genovian Parliament gives Mia thirty days to marry.

Mia, with her romantic fantasies of true love, is aghast to discover the only way to prevent Genovia from falling into Lord Nicholas Devereaux's (Mabrey's nephew) hands is an arranged marriage. After seeing a list of choices, Mia chooses Andrew Jacoby, the Duke of Kenilworth.

Mabrey is furious and decides to have his nephew Nicholas romance Mia, so she falls in love with him and doesn't marry Andrew. However, Nicholas starts to have second thoughts about his uncle's deceitful plans. He and Mia fall in love, but Mia still chooses to marry Andrew because she believes it is her duty to her country.

Nicholas travels to the wedding on a Penny-farthing in order to stop his uncle from seizing the throne. Mia changes her mind about marrying Andrew at the last minute and presents a speech broadcasted throughout Genovia as to her reasons for not marrying and requests that they accept her as queen. Mabrey takes advantage of the fact Mia has been highly unorthodox and claims she has no respect for Genovian laws and traditions. Nicholas arrives and denounces his uncle's claims and acknowledges Mia's right to the throne. Mia asks Parliament to change the law and, to Mabrey's chagrin, they agree.

Rather than letting all the wedding preparation go to waste, Queen Clarisse and Joe, who have been having a sort-of romance since the death of Clarisse's husband, decide to marry. This is often seen as an example of fan service, since the pairing of Clarisse and Joe was extremely popular among fans of the first film.

On the morning of Mia's coronation, she questions if she would be a capable ruler. Nicholas appears before her to reassure her. He admits his feelings for her and inquires if she feels the same. Then they both kissed. The story ends with Mia's coronation as Queen of Genovia and scenes of a slowly changing Genovia under her rule.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Cast Interviews

[edit] Trivia

  • Anne Hathaway's mother and director Garry Marshall have brief appearances in the film.
  • The jewelry worn by Mia and Queen Renaldi's characters was all real. A guard was on set at all times.
  • Tagline: You are cordially invited to the royal event of the season. R.S.V.P. This Summer.
  • At the end of the first movie, The Princess Diaries, Princess Mia is being flown over to the castle in Genovia. In the sequel, it portrays an entirely different castle.
  • When Queen Clarisse reacts to the fact that Princess Mia is not the first for the crown, the line she says is exactly the same as the one Mia says when Mia finds out she's a princess.
  • Julie Andrews' granddaughter, Hannah Schneider is in this movie, her character being called 'Dancing Princess Hannah.'
  • Joseph says to Viscount Mabrey that he has "diplomatic immunities in 46 countries, including Puerto Rico." The joke is that actor Hector Elizondo (Joseph) is a Puerto Rican-American.
  • A sequel was planned however, due to low ticket sales, it was cancelled.
  • The Genovian motto, "Totus corpus laborat," is bad Latin. Since "corpus" is neuter, the motto, which means "the entire body works," should read: "totum corpus laborat."

[edit] External links