Follow TV Tropes

Following

Trivia / All Dogs Go to Heaven 2

Go To

  • B-Team Sequel: Co-director Larry Leker is the only member of the creative staff from the first film to work on the sequel.
  • Blooper: In the original cut, when David's stepmother told him "Having this baby doesn't mean I don't love you" they left out the word "don't". Later printings correct the line.
  • Box Office Bomb: Grossed $8.6 million. Assuming the sequel was cheaper than the $27 million budgeted first film, it's perhaps less of a flop than its predecessor. However, the lack of a reported budget isn't helpful.
  • The Danza: Charlie Sheen as Charlie. Also an example of The Other Darrin, as Burt Reynolds was Charlie in the first film.
  • Fake American: Scotswoman Sheena Easton as Sasha.
  • Kids' Meal Toy: Subway had a set of six figures in their Kids' Paks; Charlie, Itchy, David, Sasha, Carface, and Anne-Marie.
  • Non-Singing Voice: Unlike Burt Reynolds, who provided both speaking and singing voices in the first film, and Steven Weber, who does the same for the TV series and Christmas Carol, Sheen only provides Charlie's speaking voice, with Jesse Corti (Le Fou from Disney's Beauty and the Beast) providing his singing voice.
  • The Other Darrin: Dom DeLuise is the only actor to reprise his role from the original film. Vic Tayback died a year after the first film's release, leading to Ernest Borgnine replacing him, and Burt Reynolds was presumably too expensive. Charlie Sheen would require the use of Jesse Corti as Charlie's singing voice, and would be replaced by Steven Weber in the TV series. Bebe Neuwirth also replaced Melba Moore as the angel whippet (here named Annabelle).
  • Referenced by...: Word of God states that Uka Uka from Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped was designed to be an expy of Red, with Dr. Cortex serving the role as his Carface.
  • Sequel Gap: Seven years between the first and second films.
  • Troubled Production: The directors originally intended to have the entire film animated at Screen Animation Ireland in Dublin, where Don Bluth's studio was located and had produced the original film. Halfway through production, the studio closed down, forcing the animation to be outsourced to various international studios in Taiwan, Korea, Canada and Denmark in order to meet its deadline.

Top