<h1>Movie Review : The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel</h1>

The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Directed by : ~ John Madden
Writing Credits : ~ Ol Parker
Music by : ~ Thomas Newman
At the point when "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" opened here around three years prior, more established filmgoers turned out in noteworthy numbers for a vibe decent tale about British retirees discovering fellowship, love and satisfaction in a weak Indian lodging. The surveys went from liberal to unkind—mine fell into the recent class however the film offered so firmly to its intended interest group that a spin-off was inescapable.
"The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" is an alternate peppy fable, set generally in the same pleasant areas of Jaipur, and coordinated, in the same way as the first, by John Madden. However a couple of changes have been made in the cast, most prominently the expansion of Richard Gere, and there's another turn that has less to do with plot inventions, of which there are numerous, than with an in number, actually startling, accentuation on tempus fugiting.
Mr. Gere's Guy Chambers, an American who abruptly appears at the inn, figures in a piece of the story that will be in a flash conspicuous to enthusiasts of the excellent BBC sitcom "Fawlty Towers." Guy either is or isn't a lodging reviewer relegated to condemn the first foundation, which is as yet being overseen by the youthful and chronically scattered Sonny Kapoor (Dev Patel), and on a second inn property that Sonny plans to obtain and create.
The screenplay, by Ol Parker, urges us to pass our own particular judgment on Guy's personality, yet Sonny accept from the begin that he's the genuine article, and stoops over him with a loathsome enthusiasm that makes Basil Fawlty's servility appear downplaye.