The Wedding Singer Movie Review
The Wedding Singer Review
"The Wedding Singer" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Frank CoraciProducer : Jack Giarraputo,Michelle Holdsworth,Robert Simonds
Screenwiter : Tim Herlihy
Starring : Drew Barrymore,Steve Buscemi,Adam Sandler,Christine Taylor
Nine years out of the '80s and we already have our first nostalgic look back in
Adam Sandler's The Wedding Singer, an entertaining romantic comedy which
recalls the days of big hair, Thriller, and Miami Vice with a sense of fondness.
Essentially, The Wedding Singer follows Adam Sandler as Robbie Hart, the
titular character, who is fixated upon the idea of participating in his own
wedding. Devastatingly, though, when the big day comes, his bride to be is a
no-show. She has realized that she could not spend the rest of her life with a
lowly wedding singer. Consequently, the break-up has traumatized Robbie so
much that he must avoid the painful experience of weddings altogether. Thus,
his new line as a Bar mitzvah singer. Shortly thereafter, Drew Barrymore as
Julia begins to open his eyes to love again, at which point Robbie must contend
with her creep fiancee Glen for her affections.
From that point, the story develops into something oddly familiar, and we
become aware that The Wedding Singer hearkens back to not only the fads and
fashions of the 1980s, but also to the romantic comedies from that era such as
Can't Buy Me Love and the John Hughes / Molly Ringwald movies. Those movies
concerned the lovable loser that had to compete with the bigshot jock or
cheerleader for the affections of their true love. In this remake, the high
school protagonists of those films have aged into Sandler's Robbie, ten years
out of high school but not far removed. But the sentiment of those films
remains. Instead of being a high school stud, Glen is a corporate stud, and
there is no doubt in our minds that he is the enemy.
With the modern trend in romance films like My Best Friend's Wedding and As
Good As It Gets being to present some sort of true internal conflict to the
relationship (such as a likable significant other or a psychological illness),
The Wedding Singer gleefully bucks this trend for the black and white, good vs.
evil approach of the romantic comedy of the 80s. The Wedding Singer is a witty
comedy that dwells on every aspect of pop culture from the decade past (from
Boy George to breakdance), and no laughable reference is left untouched. In
the end though, it is a simple love story from a simpler time crafted as
skillfully as ever.
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Review by Bradley Null
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