Bride Wars Movie Review
Bride Wars Review

"Bride Wars" Overview

Rating: PG
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary WinickProducer : Jay Cohen,Tony Ludwig,Matt Luber,Kate Hudson
Screenwiter : Casey Wilson,June Raphael,Greg de Paul
Starring : Kate Hudson,Anne Hathaway,Candice Bergen,Kristen Johnston,Bryan Greenberg
Code Name: The Cleaner. BloodRayne. Grandma's Boy. White Noise. Elektra. Are We
There Yet?
These are not preliminary selections for the inaugural class of an
as-yet-unfounded Hollywood Hall of Shame. They are instead the most recent
cinematic abominations to have been released in the early weeks of the new
year, dating back to 2005. My colleagues and I regularly joke that if a studio
hopes to bury a movie in the cold, efficient style of the mob hiding Jimmy
Hoffa, they release it in early January (late August is a suitable
alternative). And I've long believed if an intelligent studio sought a surefire
hit, they'd counter-program a halfway decent film against the post-holiday
garbage, then sit back and watch the box-office receipts pour in.
Bride Wars is that halfway decent film. And if that sounds like a backhanded
compliment, it's only because I enlisted in these Wars with tempered
expectations (again, the release date) and left pleasantly surprised.
Since their earliest days, best friends Liv (Kate Hudson) and Emma (Anne
Hathaway) have dreamed of getting married in Manhattan's luxurious Plaza Hotel.
Miraculously, the two end up getting engaged within weeks of each other,
bringing their collective dream one step closer to reality. But when renowned
wedding planner Marion St. Claire (Candice Bergen) accidentally books their
Plaza weddings on the same day, the girls bare their claws until one of them
backs off the overcrowded calendar.
By winning a few small battles, Bride goes a long way toward winning the larger
Wars. Director Gary Winick finds sharp laughs in the nooks and crannies of the
formula. He wrung charm out of similar fluff when he helmed the Jennifer Garner
vehicle 13 Going On 30.
Hudson and Hathaway also enjoy a happy marriage of comedic styles. Both leave
their inhibitions at the door and embrace the escalating insanity that
overwhelms their characters as the "big day" approaches. It helps that the
screenplay, while improbable, doesn't talk down to its audience. And the guys
in the cast appear as bewildered by the marital mania as most guys in the
theaters will be.
Perhaps the biggest surprise arrives just before the credits. I didn't cringe
when Wars laid the groundwork for a sequel, which may arrive, oh, nine months
from now.
That's not a moon...
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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