Something went wrong
Try again later.
St Trinian's 2: The Legend of Fritton's Gold
St Trinians 2: The Legend Of Fritton's Gold sees the schoolgirls start a new term amidst the usual chaos and excitement. The girls of St. Trinians hunt for buried treasure after discovering Miss Fritton (Rupert Everett) is related to a pirate.
7 September 1966, Hammersmith, London, England, UK
11 October 1982, London, England, UK
18 November 1986, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
1982, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England, UK
5 April 1989, London, England, UK
5 April 1981, Maidstone, Kent, England, UK
6 June 1983, London, England, UK
16 May 1997, London, England, UK
September1977, Kettering, Northamptonshire, England, UK
17 January 1978, Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
December 30, 2009
Oliver Parker and Barnaby Thompson do nothing here to destroy a winning formula which is cannily constructed to appeal to the target audience of teenage girls and nobody else.December 18, 2009
If there is a cinematic equivalent of a Christmas panto this season, it is surely St Trinian's 2, which is broad and ramshackle, cheap and gaudy.January 05, 2010
This sub-Carry On romp wearily coasts along on the lines of a rudimentary old-school farce rather than anything resembling wit.December 18, 2009
Diehard fans will lap it up...but it's difficult to see it winning any new converts.January 05, 2010
This jaw-droppingly hopeless sequel deserves to be packed off for a one-way exchange trip to Columbine.December 18, 2009
The piratical-treasure story is totally hokum, but it's all peppy, whiz-bang stuff livened up no end by Talulah Riley's fetching turn as Head Girl.January 05, 2010
It's another panto for 10-year-old girls, in which any given scene could - with only the addition of canned laughter - pass for something from children's television.December 18, 2009
Cheap, ramshackle entertainment that's nevertheless imbued with affection.January 05, 2010
This contrived sequel is an interminable, headache-inducing time-waster that never picks up any speed, weighed down as it is by far too many characters, and far too many slow-motion shots of the girls striding towards the camera.January 05, 2010
The tone is broad, vulgar and exuberant and its hunt for lost treasure ends up inventively at the Globe Theatre. Schoolgirls and those who like ogling schoolgirls will enjoy it.January 06, 2010
Strident, clumsy and pointless.January 05, 2010
A film that flails about wildly in search of at least one half-decent joke. Tragically, the closest it gets is having a dog hump Colin Firth's leg.