In this live-action prequel to The Flintstones (1994), the Flintstones and the Rubbles go on a trip to Rock Vegas, where Wilma Slaghoople is pursued by playboy Chip Rockefeller.In this live-action prequel to The Flintstones (1994), the Flintstones and the Rubbles go on a trip to Rock Vegas, where Wilma Slaghoople is pursued by playboy Chip Rockefeller.In this live-action prequel to The Flintstones (1994), the Flintstones and the Rubbles go on a trip to Rock Vegas, where Wilma Slaghoople is pursued by playboy Chip Rockefeller.
- Awards
- 1 win & 11 nominations
David Jean Thomas
- Bronto Crane Examiner
- (as David Jean-Thomas)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough he died eleven years prior to this movie's release, Mel Blanc received credit for the voice of Baby Dino. The voice was re-used from The Flintstones (1960).
- GoofsIn the first Flintstones movie, Fred stated that he met Wilma after she cleaned him off in an eating contest. In this movie, they met at a carnival after a date swap when Fred met Betty at a fast food restaurant, and Betty introduced Wilma as a date for Barney.
- Quotes
Fred Flintstone: Your eyes are like two big blue eyes.
- Crazy creditsThe Universal logo says "Univershell" and displays a single large continent. The aliens fly by that earth, and one of them mentions the letters.
- Alternate versionsTV airings add the following omitted scenes:
- Betty dumping her boyfriend at the burger joint, after seeing he's cheating on her
- A few lines of additional dialogue between Fred and Betty as they race to the roller coaster
- A scene where Fred and William are eating out and Barney asks if they've seen Betty before she runs into McJagger
- Barney confronts Fred about Betty as he gambles at the slots
- An extended scene where Chip talks about Fred's unpaid credit and Fred proposes to pay him off with his paychecks
- Longer version of Wilma's mother trying to convince her to marry Chip while his dad goes off to "assemble the troops"
- The goons meet up with Chip as the security mentions Fred and Barney's escape
- Barney and Wilma rekindling after knocking McJagger out
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Rosie O'Donnell Show: Episode #4.160 (2000)
- SoundtracksViva Las Vegas (Viva Rock Vegas)
Words and Music by Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman
Performed by Ann-Margret
Produced by Brian Rawling and Walter Turbitt
Special guitar performence by James Burton
Also performed by Alan Cumming
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Featured review
"The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas" is actually slightly more bearable than the truly horrible 1994 movie, but that really isn't saying much. Where the previous one suffered from chronically bad casting for the Flintstones and the Rubbles (except for Elizabeth Perkins as Wilma), this benefits from Stephen Baldwin and Jane "Best reason to watch 'Ally McBeal' not called Lucy Liu" Krakowski making a far less annoying Barney and Betty than Rick Moranis and Rosie O'Donnell (the latter the only major cast member to return here, in voice mode only). The movie also has a few nice little touches like pictures of the cartoon Fred and Barney handed out to people, and the specially modified Universal logo with the Earth only showing one continent behind the word "Univershell" ("Did anyone else see those giant letters out there?").
Alan Cumming as the Great Gazoo (and a Mick Jagger-type rock star) is also one of the movie's pros... and indicative of its cons. Writers Deborah Kaplan & Harry Elfont ("Can't Hardly Wait," "Josie and the Pussycats") and the late Jim Cash & Jack Epps, Jr ("Top Gun," "Anaconda") go for too many cheap gags, have a wilful disregard for the show's mythology - Gazoo didn't arrive until Fred and Barney were both married with children, for starters (and as another poster rightly says, he crashlanded as opposed to being sent) - and don't really have much of a plot going for them. The movie's all as silly as that episode where the boys befriended "Ann-Margrock" without knowing who she was.
Speaking of which, Ann-Margret (who guested on the TV show) returns to Bedrock to sing "Viva Rock Vegas" in a montage and over the credits, but her take isn't a patch on the BC-52's version of the theme song in the first one, and indeed the overall feeling of going down a level is everywhere - not just in the plot of Wilma's mum wanting her daughter (a miscast Kristen Johnston) to marry an uppercrust type (Thomas Gibson from "Dharma & Greg"), but from the cast to the visual effects (Rhythm & Hues aren't quite up to Industrial Light & Magic's level) to the music (song-wise, that is; David Newman at least tries), the movie fits in all too well alongside the other losers directed by Brian Levant, he of "Problem Child" and "Jingle All The Way" infamy. And I still think James Belushi, not John Goodman or Mark Addy, IS Fred Flintstone.
At least the first one had Halle Berry and some puns in the credits (though this does have Jane Krakowski - hubba hubba). And no Joan Collins...
Alan Cumming as the Great Gazoo (and a Mick Jagger-type rock star) is also one of the movie's pros... and indicative of its cons. Writers Deborah Kaplan & Harry Elfont ("Can't Hardly Wait," "Josie and the Pussycats") and the late Jim Cash & Jack Epps, Jr ("Top Gun," "Anaconda") go for too many cheap gags, have a wilful disregard for the show's mythology - Gazoo didn't arrive until Fred and Barney were both married with children, for starters (and as another poster rightly says, he crashlanded as opposed to being sent) - and don't really have much of a plot going for them. The movie's all as silly as that episode where the boys befriended "Ann-Margrock" without knowing who she was.
Speaking of which, Ann-Margret (who guested on the TV show) returns to Bedrock to sing "Viva Rock Vegas" in a montage and over the credits, but her take isn't a patch on the BC-52's version of the theme song in the first one, and indeed the overall feeling of going down a level is everywhere - not just in the plot of Wilma's mum wanting her daughter (a miscast Kristen Johnston) to marry an uppercrust type (Thomas Gibson from "Dharma & Greg"), but from the cast to the visual effects (Rhythm & Hues aren't quite up to Industrial Light & Magic's level) to the music (song-wise, that is; David Newman at least tries), the movie fits in all too well alongside the other losers directed by Brian Levant, he of "Problem Child" and "Jingle All The Way" infamy. And I still think James Belushi, not John Goodman or Mark Addy, IS Fred Flintstone.
At least the first one had Halle Berry and some puns in the credits (though this does have Jane Krakowski - hubba hubba). And no Joan Collins...
- Victor Field
- Mar 30, 2002
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Flintstones 2
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $83,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $35,268,275
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $10,518,435
- Apr 30, 2000
- Gross worldwide
- $59,468,275
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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