Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 120000000

Revenue

$ 259175788

Top Billed Cast

Cameron Diaz

Natalie Cook

Drew Barrymore

Dylan Sanders

Lucy Liu

Alex Munday

Demi Moore

Madison Lee

Bernie Mac

Jimmy Bosley

Justin Theroux

Seamus O'Grady

Robert Patrick

Ray Carter

Crispin Glover

Thin Man

Shia LaBeouf

Max Petroni

Luke Wilson

Pete Kominsky

Matt LeBlanc

Jason Gibbons

John Cleese

Mr. Munday

John Forsythe

Charles 'Charlie' Townsend (voice)

Rodrigo Santoro

Randy Emmers

Robert Forster

Roger Wixon

Ja'net DuBois

Momma Bosley

袁祥仁

Deranged Mongol

Daxing Zhang

Demented Mongol

Bruce Comtois

Large Mongol

Khin-Kyaw Maung

Crooked-Tooth

Tanoai Reed

Wrestler

Andrew Wilson

Cop

Eric Bogosian

Alan Caulfield

Eve

Self

Pink

Coal Bowl Starter

Carrie Fisher

Mother Superior

Zack Shada

Thin Boy

Jennifer Gimenez

Nun

Kate Hendrickson

Nun

Josh Janowicz

Hot Priest

Tommy Flanagan

Irish Henchman

Chris Pontius

Irish Henchman

Luke Massy

Irish Henchman

Big Boy

Bosley's Cousin

Anthony Griffith

Bosley's Cousin

Wayne Federman

Bathroom Guy

Steve Hytner

Bathroom Guy

Bob Stephenson

Crazed Fan

Shanti Lowry

Treasure Chest Dancer

Nadine Ellis

Treasure Chest Dancer

Cyia Batten

Treasure Chest Dancer

Staci B. Flood

Treasure Chest Dancer

Carmit Bachar

Treasure Chest Dancer

Béla Károlyi

Self

Ricky Carmichael

Self

Carey Hart

Self

Chris Gosselaar

Self

Jeremy McGrath

Self

Mark Cotone

Prison Guard

Bruce Willis

William Rose Bailey

Melissa McCarthy

Bystander (uncredited)

Ashley Olsen

Future Angel (uncredited)

Mary-Kate Olsen

Future Angel (uncredited)

Jaclyn Smith

Kelly Garrett (uncredited)

Sven-Ole Thorsen

Machine Gun Mongol (uncredited)

Joan Blair

Beach Lady With Sandcastle (uncredited)

Khristian Lupo

Mongolian Key Keeper (uncredited)

Matt McColm

O'Grady's Goon (uncredited)

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Movie Reviews

A review by JPV852

Written by JPV852 on 2019-10-22

Really poor sequel that has outlandish action scenes and lame jokes. If there's such a thing as a movie that epitomizes the early 2000s, this is it. Maybe it's my older age, but the T&A aspect holds little weight anymore. **1.75/5**

A review by themoviediorama

Written by themoviediorama on 2020-01-16

Charlie’s Angels Full Throttle fully accelerates whilst narratively stuck in second gear. Can I order a McG sandwich please? Huh? You have no filling? Sure, I’ll just take the overly stylised sauce. My personal adoration for this sequel’s predecessor is one that cannot be described fully without tackling the realms of lunacy and diminishing my own critical insight. It’s just a special piece of camp nostalgia for me, even if its construction is more amateurish than Diaz’ dance moves. Interestingly, this continuation was also on repeat as I galloped around the room to the soundtrack of The Prodigy and The Chemical Brothers, witnessing physically impossible aerobatic stunts. However, after all these years, it’s time to succumb to the realisation that Full Throttle is a bad film. Much like the first feature, its plot is a secondary product to the outlandish femme fatale antics. This time the angels must secure two H.A.L.O. rings which probably has something to do with monetisation and greed. Don’t ask me! For I honestly do not know. A stationery Barrymore sliding fully under a low table without the use of her arms had me entranced. Liu leaping sixty feet into the air by just jumping off a table had me hypnotised. And of course, Diaz bopping to MC Hammer’s “U Can’t Touch This” had me salivating. These, including the last point (have you tried side stepping that rapidly!?), are physically impossible to perform. The wired stunts and choreography are so exaggerated that it becomes laughably terrible, juxtaposing the semi-realistic narrative that McG is attempting to convey. Driving off a dam whilst trying to fly into a helicopter and take off (all in mid-air by the way...) before it crashes? Sure. Why not. Performing motocross stunts whilst upside down and shooting the angels? Eh. I’ll let it slide. Using a lace cape as a squirrel suit, throwing a bomb into a film premiere and perfectly landing in a car whilst being pursed by the angels who are hanging onto illuminated wires? Ummm. I guess. Being tossed through a shop window, like a rag doll, and walking it off before getting changed for the premiere? Now wait just a minute! Heightened stunts and ‘Matrix’-styled slow motion is all fine and dandy, but I need an ounce of realism in order to feel threatened by the danger on screen. The angels are invulnerable to everything, making the entire ordeal worthless. Yes, using a flamethrower to “Firestarter” is bonafide brilliance and shaped me to be the man that I am today. Yet the random action set pieces (to which there are loads!) cannot justify the narrative’s direction. Again, frustrating considering the onscreen chemistry of Diaz, Barrymore and Liu. The one and only Demi Moore is used for an underdeveloped plot twist, as she suggestively licks Diaz’ face. Oh, and Bernie Mac replaced Murray. A fine replacement, but again, under-utilised. Let’s not even discuss Theroux’s insulting Irish accent. The technical aspects, especially the garish green screen and floaty human CGI, unintentionally adds characteristics to the film in general, yet still executed terribly. And the callback “humour”, mostly consisting of the “creepy thin man” and the angels’ relationship, were cringeworthy at best. Although, the ongoing innuendos between Alex and her father did make me chuckle continuously. Is it enough to substantiate a sequel that showcases the apparent curse of “more is better”? Absolutely not. Whilst the heart of Charlie’s Angels resides within, its discombobulated exterior diminished most of the heavenly fun to be had.

A review by SoSmooth1982

Written by SoSmooth1982 on 2023-05-04

Not as good as the 1st. It was still pretty funny. The sexy trio's fight scenes were a little better in this one.

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2025-02-03

If you had a whole collection of secret information why would you keep it all in one place and put it all on something as easily stolen as a ring? That's what's happened here only there are two rings and they contain all the details of the folks on the witness protection scheme. When they both fall into dangerously unscrupulous hands, and the body count starts to mount up, it falls to the lithe "Natalie" (Cameron Diaz), "Alex" (Lucy Liu) and "Dylan" (Drew Barrymore) to fly into action and save the day. Bill Murray decided to sit this one out, but luckily there's a "Jimmy Bosley" (Bernie Mac) there to keep them all co-ordinated and to hone in on their prime suspect. She's a former angel, herself, only this time "Madison" (Demi Moore) is not in a forgiving vein. It's all fairly standard action fayre that's largely the same as the last one from three years ago. There's a decent dynamic between the three women but the slo-motion action scenes, pyrotechnics and pretty banal dialogue don't really do it any favours as it lumbers along predictably. There's the usual soupçon of glittering faces to top it up, and a small slice of menace from both Robert Patrick and from the star of the film for me - Crispin Glover as the "Thin Man" or maybe that's "Thin Men". I still miss Kate Duncan's "Sabrina" and the more investigative nature of these mysteries. This is all just too blandly kick-ass and attitudinal for me providing nothing really new. It passes the time easily enough but you'll never remember it.