Ingenuity creeps into several scenes of the largely stereotypical chick-flick love comedy "The Wedding...">

View all comments (2) - Comment on this review

The Wedding Date Movie Review

The Wedding Date Review

MESSING'S MESSY 'DATE'

Hiring a gigolo to play boyfriend at sister's nuptials has predictable results in chemistry-free comedy

A scene from 'The Wedding Date'

"The Wedding Date" Overview

** stars

90 minutes | Rated: PG-13
WIDE: Friday, February 4, 2005


Cast and Crew

Directed by Clare Kilner


Starring Debra Messing, Dermot Mulroney, Holland Taylor, Jack Davenport, Jeremy Sheffield, Sarah Parish, Amy Adams

 
Debra Messing picture 2646084 Debra Messing picture 2646105
 

 

Click for the DEBRA MESSING Gallery

Ingenuity creeps into several scenes of the largely stereotypical chick-flick love comedy "The Wedding Date" -- but all its imagination comes at the wrong end of the creative process. What good is a uniquely photographed dance scene if the characters dancing together are barely two-dimensional?

The plot is pure, predictable sitcom gimmickry: Debra Messing plays a romantically frazzled beauty in her early 30s (not entirely unlike her sitcom role on TVs "Will and Grace") who hires an escort (Dermot Mulroney) to act the part of a besotted boyfriend at her sister's wedding. She hopes to stave off haranguing from her embarrassing, busybody mother (the fabulously uppity Holland Taylor) and stir jealousy in the ex-fiancé who left her at the altar two years before.

Peppered with conventional montage sequences (set to shopworn 1950s girl-group ditties and Shania Twain anthems), and pushed along by overly-staged scenes that defy common sense, the script is clumsy at best. Even though she's anxious about pulling off this stunt, Messing hires Mulroney sight unseen and doesn't concoct a backstory (his occupation, where they met, how long they've been dating) until pulling him into a coat room at the rehearsal dinner in a panic. This despite having a 12-hour cross-Atlantic flight during which they could have been rehearsing their fictional relationship.

Throw in a loudmouthed, oversexed best friend (lifted from Britcoms like "Bridget Jones"), a secret that threatens to derail the nuptials, and purely expositional scenes like the one in which characters who are trying to avoid each other inexplicably picnic together for the sake of moving along various subplots, and "The Wedding Date" has a lot of hackneyed hurdles to overcome.

Great chemistry and good humor between romantic leads has often lent charm to bad scripts, but alas, Messing and Mulroney are so mismatched, and their character so underwritten (save that fact that Mulroney's gigolo spouts preposterously sage advice to anyone in earshot), that the atmosphere of their eventual drunken (but supposedly magical) sex scene approaches genuine creepiness.

Will he expect extra payment for additional services rendered? Is he giving her a freebie because she's a knockout? Is he falling for her? It's impossible to tell. Will she remember jumping his bones when the hangover wears off? Will she think he took advantage? Is she falling for him? This stuff may not be going through the characters' heads, but a viewer can't help but be preoccupied as they strip off their clothes.

It doesn't help that one pivotal moment in which these two stare at each other with supposed desire in their eyes has obviously (and I mean obviously) had its dialogue re-recorded after the fact, further dampening any hint of romantic spark. And why are all the anxieties of Messing's character abandoned after the first act, making her character (and by extension the whole movie) seem suddenly dull?

Director Clare Kilner ("How to Deal") tries hard to make the picture's bumpy story arch seem fresh with stylish, somewhat unconventional visuals (not unlike Bronwen Hughes did in the off-kilter Ben Affleck-Sandra Bullock comedy "Forces of Nature"). But at its heart "The Wedding Date" is a sloppy collage of romantic conventions and misfiring plot devices, all wrapped up in a pretty package.



Review by

Rob Blackwelder


click here - Write for us - get your reviews published on Contactmusic
 

Comments

screen name:

romanticomedyqueen! Click for more info ( 1)

posted on 16/09/2006 07:35


comments:

I have to disagree with your take on this movie. I thought it was the best movie I have seen in a long time. I think that movies like, While You Were Sleeping and Must Love Dogs along with The Wedding Date are great movies to enjoy because they are real funny and real situations..I'm not sure I would have made him a Male Escort...but, they did a fantastic job both Debra and Dermot. I loved the father and her crazy cousin! I totally enjoyed the on location in England..that was beautiful showing the countryside when they were all on their way to the summer place and boat house, and family situations do sometimes turn out that way. Dermot was so sauve and did a great job falling in love with Debra without all the gushingness that sometimes lingers in a long draw out Romantic Comedy..this one came to the point and worked well for me. Just my Opinion! I have watched it several times and haven't yet gotten bored. Pick on a movie like 'Picture Perfect'...now that was a flop to me!




screen name:

arsh1910 Click for more info ( 1)

posted on 28/11/2005 13:06


comments:

well i totally disagree with the review!!! i think u hve exxagerated alot wen u wrote the following : "Messing “stretches” her acting “muscles” to play an insecure, neurotic New Yorker named Kat (Grace was too obvious) who hires an escort (half-asleep Dermot Mulroney) so she doesn’ t have to attend her stepsister’s wedding alone.'' This was one of the best movies released this year..... Debra did a gr88 job playing a nervous wreck!!! and abt Dermot all i can say is he was brilliant..no1 cud hve played this role better than him!!!!!! THE MOVIE ROCKED!!!!





View all comments (2) - Comment on this review




©2009 Contactmusic.com Ltd, all rights reserved