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Despite fine actors, ‘Second Best’ lives up to its name

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Christy Meyer as Jasmine and Judi Dench as Evelyn Greenslade in "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel." (Laurie Sparham/Fox Searchlight/TNS)

If you’re going to do a movie sequel that doesn’t quite measure up to the original and seems rather hurriedly cobbled together, well, OK. Many filmmakers have done the same.

THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL’
Rated: PG
**
Opens Friday

But actually putting the words "Second Best" in the title? Now, that’s just asking for the unflattering comparisons.

This isn’t to say that "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" — so named after an actual hotel in the movie — won’t appeal to the same fans who flocked to the first film. And it’s hard to quibble over the value of spending two hours with the likes of Judi Dench and Maggie Smith. Indeed, Smith’s exasperated rant over the state of lukewarm tea in the United States is alone worth the price of a ticket.

But much of the film feels like a hastily arranged class reunion, where you show up but have less to talk about than last time. You still have some fun, but, like a cup of — er — lukewarm tea, it’s definitely second best.

The sequel brings us back to Jaipur, India, a few years after the British retirees first made their home in the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, where they discovered that although the place wasn’t as luxurious as advertised, it was full of life — and life lessons.

Sonny (Dev Patel), the ambitious and very talkative co-manager, is his usual hyperactive self, taking roll call every morning of the elderly residents, who’ve all settled into some sort of productive activity.

There’s the widowed Evelyn (Dench), now a textile buyer for an overseas company. There’s her would-be beau, Douglas (Bill Nighy), who’s trying to summon the guts to declare his love, while serving as the least-qualified tour guide in all of India. There’s romance-starved Madge (Celia Imrie), dallying simultaneously with two rich suitors, and there’s Norman (Ronald Pickup), the playboy who’s now seeking a different kind of happiness.

And there’s Muriel (Smith), now Sonny’s co-manager, keeping him as grounded and practical as she can.

The film, directed by John Madden (who wrote the script with Ol Parker) opens with Muriel and Sonny on a road trip to a California retirement company they’re hoping will fund Sonny’s franchise dreams. Sonny’s plan centers on buying a second hotel — to be christened, of course, "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel."

Back in India, Sonny is too obsessed with his plan to pay any attention to his impending wedding — an obvious source of frustration to his fiancee, lovely Sunaina (Tina Desai). And he’s so driven that when a guest named Guy Chambers (Richard Gere) shows up — and yes, that does sound like a porn star, but actually he’s a novelist — Sonny’s convinced he’s the inspector that the retirement company’s CEO said he’d send, incognito, to check out the place. Much stress ensues.

As Chambers, the silver-haired Gere is sure to cause a frisson with the ladies, both on screen and in the theater, but Gere pretty much floats through the film without much exertion — and the suddenness of his attraction to Sonny’s mother (Lillete Dubey) is not very convincing.

Also perturbing is a subplot involving a potentially sad fate for one of the characters. It’s hinted at strongly and then dropped, or at least made so subtle that you wonder whether, midshoot, the filmmakers changed their minds.

In any case, it all boils down to that final wedding scene. Without spoiling much, we can tell you the colors are gorgeous (check out Sunaina’s red sari), and as for the obligatory dance sequence — it may be obligatory, but it’s huge fun. Keep your eyes on Patel: he’s having a ball, and it’s infectious. If the rest of the film were this appealing, it wouldn’t feel "second best" at all.

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