Still Waiting In the Wings

Still Waiting In the Wings

By Q. Allan Brocka

  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release Date: 2018-06-09
  • Advisory Rating: NR
  • Runtime: 1h 49min
  • Director: Q. Allan Brocka
  • Production Company: JJ Spotlight Productions
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
1/10
1
From 1 Ratings

Description

Still Waiting In The Wings follows the trials and triumphs of actors waiting tables in Times Square. While dreaming of the Broadway stage, the reality of slinging hash under fluorescent lights mixes sweet aspirations with bitter drama. There's no people like show people and there's no telling what can happen when they're pitted against each other. Nick Adams, Ed Asner, Carole Cook, Lee Meriwether, Patricia Richardson, Chita Rivera, Seth Rudetsky, Sally Struthers, Bruce Vilanch, and Cindy Williams round out this heartwarming homage to Broadway with some delightful cameos.

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Reviews

  • AMAZING

    5
    By sophia.barajas
    A great sequel to the first movie!! Super fun, you will not be disappointed! I can watch it over and over again, and still be fully entertained 🤩💕
  • A brilliant sequel

    5
    By DrSexyAss
    This film is amazing, the songs, dance, hot guys, brilliant writing, wonderful cast. This movie is a must see, as is the original waiting in the wings. I suggest buying it to rewatch with friends and family for years to come.
  • Fun musical!

    5
    By NHarber
    If you want a fun romantic comedy musical then this is right up your alley! You don’t have to have seen the first one to enjoy this one. It can stand in its own. Watch and have a good laugh, and maybe get a song stuck in your head.
  • So much fun!!!

    5
    By Redhamilla
    Great celebrity cameos, fabulous music and dancing, and all around funny plot. This is one of the cutest newest movie musicals I’ve seen.
  • Pure Musical Fun!!

    5
    By muscprdcr
    I could watch this 10 times! The cast and music are just fantastic!
  • Fun , whimsical Musical. Loved it

    5
    By Sawyerhuss
    It’s just the right amount of fun and escapism one needs right now. If you’re looking to laugh and be entertained and maybe even have your heart warmed a bit, this is the movie for you. Lovable characters, great new musical numbers! You can tell a lot of heart and soul was put into making this film! I loved it! And it has some great cameos by some real comic legends !
  • THE WAIT IS OVER!

    5
    By mmfl03
    As a fan of WAITING IN THE WINGS, the wait (you’ll pardon the unintended pun) for this sequel was far too long. For those who never saw the first film - fear not - this installment stands on its own. Scripted by Jeffrey Johns, who created the characters and wrote the original film, along with Arie Gonzalez, and directed by Q. Allan Brocka, who is no stranger to the genre, STILL WAITING is great fun! Packed full of musical numbers, which are just long enough to entertain, and short enough to keep the film’s pace moving, the story, which could seem contrived, is nothing short (sorry, Jeffrey and Joe) of the genuine and inherent quest of chasing dreams. While the celebrity cameo appearances are great fun, they don’t “make” the film. What makes the film is Johns, Brocka, and their team’s storytelling. As with the first film, there’s plenty of meaty flesh and skin, providing eye candy, and the lighthearted humor flows from scene to scene. Johns’ wide-eyed, innocent Anthony, at the center of it all, subconsciously (perhaps consciously for some) causes viewers to revert back to a simpler, more hopeful time in their lives, even if only for 107 minutes. It’s clear that Johns, and his cast members, have developed personal friendships since the first film. The chemistry between them permeates the screen, in each and every scene. This is no more true than the “stoop scene,” which, appears to be the “turning point” in the film. Observed from a window above, by Blake Peyrot’s Lee, Rena Strober’s Rita, and Lee Merriweather’s Ethel (who, thankfully, has more screen time in this film), Johns’ Anthony and Adam Huss’ Tony, who up until that point appeared to be polar opposites, share a candid, “heart to heart” where we find that they’re more similar than we, or they, would’ve thought. They’re both just individuals, struggling with heartache, caused really through no fault of their own. Each serves as an objective observer to the other’s plight, and offers candid counsel. These two are not just “roommates,” but friends. At first, this viewer thought that, while the “entertainment” value was in full-force, the film seemed to lack the “heart” that the first one exuded. He was wrong, as from the “stoop scene,” onward, the film rides its heart all the way into the sunset. My hope, at this point, is that Johns and his team don’t keep us FURTHER STILL WAITING IN THE WINGS, for the third installment. The world needs music . . . and for this story to continue . . .

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