Analyze That (2002) 

crime comedy

directed by : Harold Ramis
featuring : Robert DeNiro - Billy Crystal - Lisa Kudrow - Joe Viterelli - Reg Rogers - Yogi Berra
running time : 1  hour 35 minutes 
Everyone's favorite neurotic mafia boss is out of prison and back on the couch in this sequel to the hit comedy Analyze This. Ever since he ended up behind bars, mob leader Paul Vitti (Robert DeNiro) has been in sad shape, alternately weeping like a child and singing favorite tunes from West Side Story. Fearful of his emotional stability, prison officials release Vitti into the custody of his psychiatrist, Dr. Ben Sobel (Billy Crystal), but this is far more responsibility than Sobel wants he's having troubles with his family after the recent death of his father, also an analyst, and has been overworked since taking over his late father's practice. Sobel becomes even more exasperated when he learns Vitti will be moving into his home, which is especially upsetting for Sobel's wife, Laura (Lisa Kudrow). As Sobel tries to get to the root of Vitti's problems which are very much real, even if he was faking his symptoms behind bars he tries to help Vitti find a straight job, which is hardly easy for a man of his temperament. And adding to all this confusion, several members of Vitti's old crew are after him, determined to insure that he doesn't pass along any incriminating information. Analyze That also features Cathy Moriaty Gentile.

Although not very critically well-received, this sequel to the box office hit Analyze This (1999) is sufficiently funny to keep fans of the original film entertained, if not entirely satisfied, on a storytelling level. Crystal and DeNiro simply retread their comedy-duo shtick as a therapist and mob-boss patient, stretching little beyond the character parameters previously charted, but there are plenty of amusing interactions between them. As before, Crystal does most of the humorous heavy lifting in these scenes, which don't require much performing on the part of his co-star. DeNiro is required several times, though, to boisterously sing show tunes from West Side Story, as amusingly cringe-inducing a send-up of his persona as his unconvincing crying jags in both films. Their scenes together are too derivative of many moments from the first film, but the mismatched leads are still funny together and they're the best thing about these pictures; one wonders what another team-up in a completely different story with new characters would yield. Wasted, unfortunately, are several interesting co-stars such as Kudrow, again given nothing to do but whine, and Anthony LaPaglia, in a subplot involving a Sopranos-style television series that offers ripe opportunity for mining new laughs from the material but pretty much goes nowhere fast. If too much of Analyze That feels repetitious and programmed from its progenitor, blame the sequel-centric mentality of Hollywood which dictates that characters cannot change too much from one film to the next for fear of derailing a potential franchise, a flaw once shared by television shows.