In addition to this, he is having trouble using a potty, and the unorthodox advice he gets from his playmate, Eddie (voiced by Damon Wayans), doesn't make his problem any better.
James is provided a job as a full time pilot thanks to Mollie's parents and the longer work hours strain the couple's relationship.
Mollie sees this and showers Julie with affection for her accomplishment, but the happiness is short lived, as James is not there to share the moment.
James is due to go flying despite a massive storm building in the area, Mollie gets worried and leaves Mikey and Julie in Stuart's care.
A variation with the standard version of the fanfare, which was credited at the end, exists at the beginning of the logo when Bruce Willis (voice of Mikey) was doing a Mister Ed imitation.
One notable addition is a running gag where Mollie chats with her friends and folks and it ignites a daydream of James cheating on her.
[4] Catherine Dunphy of The Toronto Star called it "a movie filled with the kind of thigh-slapping potty jokes only those still not trained could love", while noting that the character of Mikey was "old enough by any pediatric standards to speak for himself by now".
[6] Greg Potter of the Vancouver Sun wrote that "if not for the sweet, cherubic countenances of the wee tikes innocently gagaing amid the unscrupulous exploitation and bald-faced money-grubbing of Look Who's Talking Too, this 81-minute testimony to the despicably twisted motives of Hollywood sequel mongers would be even more insufferable".
[7] David Armstrong of the San Francisco Examiner called the film "utterly undistinguished product—witless, vulgar, filled with potty jokes and gags about genitalia, stuffed with can't-miss-'em-product plugs, weighted down with a gratuitous chase-and-fight scene, loaded with old pop songs to underscore what the characters—and thus the audience—are supposed to be feeling".
[8] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune called it a "toilet-humored sequel that loses the romance and Innocence that made the original film such a pleasant surprise.
John Travolta and Kirstie Alley return with a new baby girl with the voice of Roseanne Barr, who has been given absolutely nothing funny to say.
The story line is so flimsy that the film deteriorates into a series of music videos [that] are downright delightful compared to some of the minor characters, particularly the kids' mooching, trigger-happy Uncle Stuart and the proprietor of the baby gym, played by one Gilbert Gottfried (picture Richard Simmons with Martha Raye's mouth) whose performance makes Pee-wee Herman look like Sir Laurence Olivier.
[11] David Lyman of The Cincinnati Post gave a negative review and called it "humorless", "dismally dull" and "totally devoid of cleverness".
[12] Ryan Murphy of The Miami Herald gave the film only one star, and stated that "director Amy Heckerling has whipped up a banal entirely soulless cinematic concoction whose main ingredients are vulgar bathroom humor (there are at least two dozen references to poo-poo and pee-pee) and bothersome Mr. Ed baby tricks in which the mouths of poor toddlers and infants are manipulated to produce overdone talking effects".
Once again co-starring John Travolta and Kirstie Alley, alongside David Gallagher and Tabitha Lupien as Mikey and Julie respectively, the film centers around the introduction of two pet dogs to the family.
The two animals, an Irish-wire fox terrier mutt and a white coat poodle who compete for the family's affection, were voiced by Danny DeVito and Diane Keaton, respectively.