Caddyshack II
When a crass new-money tycoon's membership application is turned down at a snooty country club, he retaliates by buying the club and turning it into a tacky amusement park. Jack Hartounian, a self-mad…
Caddyshack II
When a crass new-money tycoon's membership application is turned down at a snooty country club, he retaliates by buying the club and turning it into a tacky amusement park. Jack Hartounian, a self-made man is trying to get into Bushwood County Club because his daughter is being asked by her snooty friends. Jack applies, but a couple things ruin his application: one being that he's extremely boorish and the other is that he is building low-cost housing in an affluent neighborhood. Jack then turns to Ty Webb, who owns the majority share of the club; Jack buys Ty's shares, takes over the club, and makes some changes which the members don't like. That's when the club members attack Jack by stopping his housing project. Eventually they decide to settle it on the golf course, but the club president decides to take contingencies. —rcs0411@yahoo.com After the reckless wager in Caddyshack (1980), Kate Hartounian, and her unrefined real-estate developer father, Jack, apply to join the elitist Bushwood Country Club, only to find themselves kicked out. As a result, much to the horror of the club's haughty president, Chandler Young, and his equally snotty wife, Cynthia, the self-made millionaire realises that the only way to join the exclusive golf club is by buying it. Now, as if that weren't enough, Jack intends to turn the once-prestigious Bushwood into the gaudiest miniature-golf park in America. Will a climactic face-off settle their differences once and for all? —Nick Riganas Kate Hartounian is a young girl with a snotty rich friend who wants Kate and her father, Jack, to become members at a high-class golf club. Everything is going fine until the current members meet Jack. His application to join is rejected. In retaliation, Jack buys the rights to the club and turns it into an amusement park-type golf club. In order to settle things once and for all, the two sides face off in a golf match. —Anonymous
Caddyshack II
Comedy,Sport
Film Details
When a crass new-money tycoon's membership application is turned down at a snooty country club, he retaliates by buying the club and turning it into a tacky amusement park. Jack Hartounian, a self-made man is trying to get into Bushwood County Club because his daughter is being asked by her snooty friends. Jack applies, but a couple things ruin his application: one being that he's extremely boorish and the other is that he is building low-cost housing in an affluent neighborhood.
Jack then turns to Ty Webb, who owns the majority share of the club; Jack buys Ty's shares, takes over the club, and makes some changes which the members don't like. That's when the club members attack Jack by stopping his housing project. Eventually they decide to settle it on the golf course, but the club president decides to take contingencies.
—rcs0411@yahoo.com After the reckless wager in Caddyshack (1980), Kate Hartounian, and her unrefined real-estate developer father, Jack, apply to join the elitist Bushwood Country Club, only to find themselves kicked out. As a result, much to the horror of the club's haughty president, Chandler Young, and his equally snotty wife, Cynthia, the self-made millionaire realises that the only way to join the exclusive golf club is by buying it. Now, as if that weren't enough, Jack intends to turn the once-prestigious Bushwood into the gaudiest miniature-golf park in America.
Will a climactic face-off settle their differences once and for all? —Nick Riganas Kate Hartounian is a young girl with a snotty rich friend who wants Kate and her father, Jack, to become members at a high-class golf club. Everything is going fine until the current members meet Jack. His application to join is rejected.
In retaliation, Jack buys the rights to the club and turns it into an amusement park-type golf club. In order to settle things once and for all, the two sides face off in a golf match. —Anonymous.