It is also clear that these are people we should dislike, but I find myself drawn to both of them. Backing up, the premise of the movie is simple – a pair of unlikable cynics meet each other waiting for a flight. It might just be one of the most quotable films I’ve seen with a lot of intellectual barbs. The movie is dialogue driven – a machine-gun like back and forth of verbal jousting – as our overly cynical leads are trapped in a battle of wits. Speaking of the cast, how can a movie go wrong when the male lead is Ted Logan, Johnny Utah, Jack Traven, Johnny Mnemonic, Neo, John Constantine, and John Wick – I just realized that is a lot of Johns – none other than Mr. Keanu Reeves himself. ‘Yes, and some people have six fingers,’ he retorts.
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For marketing exec Frank, it’s an opportunity to score badly needed points with his hyper-critical mother, whose multiple, brutal divorces have caused him everlasting emotional trauma. Whatever the intent, forcing a couple of middle-aged misanthropes to reluctantly attend the nuptials of their rather reviled friends sets a hopelessly high bar for delivering satisfying entertainment. If you have an aversion to one or both of these actors then it’s safe to assume that Destination Wedding is not for you.
Beautiful Dream-Like Wedding Film
- Looking like it was shot on a ten day break between John Wick sequels and seasons of Stranger Things, this dry comedy works because Reeves and Ryder understand the tone of the film and know how to cleverly deliver the dialogue.
- As Cora tries to rush for them to get out of here and about to take the cart back, Madea takes the cart and throws it off across the parking lot, causing it to violently wreck into another car, triggering its alarm and force the trio to frantically flee the scene.
- The two motormouths in question are Lindsey (Winona Ryder) and Frank (Keanu Reeves), two Southern Californians who meet en route to the central coast for the wedding in question.
- Writer-director Victor Levin, who brought similarly astute rat-a-tat dialogue to the underrated TV comedy Survivor’s Remorse, taps into that clandestine thrill of quietly berating those around you with someone who’s on the same, bitter page.
- Since meeting, we’ve spent our days traveling, relaxing on the great lakes, sailing the North Channel, having impromptu jam sessions at home around the piano, and spending time with family and friends (and our pup, Tully, of course!).
- Writer-director Levin, whose last feature was the 2015 romantic drama 5 to 7, here clearly aspires to the level of bold repartee characteristic of classic screwball comedy, a risky strategy at best.
The two strangers meet on a charter plane to San Luis Obispo, where it’s hate at first sight. In the end, if you hate the characters and dislike RomComs, it should still be good for more than a few laughs because, above all else, this was an exceptional comedy. Unusually, and in a style that feels borrowed from the theatre, there are no supporting characters for the pair to play off (or more likely, bond conspiratorially against). Both characters begin complaining bitterly at one another within seconds of meeting and don’t stop until the film is over. I’m a sucker for dialogue-heavy movies, but the dialogue has to be good, and it is here.
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Quality control is low even by his hit-and-miss, too-many-movies-a-year standards. Sometimes people walk up and stand there in plain view while the others remain oblivious to their presence. Little thought has been given to how people end up where they need to be to overhear something they shouldn’t or interfere in a conversation that was supposed to be private. Joe convinces the pious and clean-living Leroy that it’s a gospel-themed party, practically a church service. There’s a scene in a gift shop where lots of stuff is added to their bill, and scenes in the casino where Joe gambles and tells the house to add his tally to the bill.
The pair share an easy, spiky chemistry and Reeves in particular shows himself to be surprisingly skilled at delivering such bile-filled dialogue. Writer-director Victor Levin, who brought similarly astute rat-a-tat dialogue to the underrated TV comedy Survivor’s Remorse, taps into that clandestine thrill of quietly berating those around you with someone who’s on the same, bitter page. They’re appalled to be going to a wedding, let alone a selfishly designed destination wedding, and the ensuing action, or rather lack thereof, sees them slowly bonding over their hatred for the world around them. The nuptials in question are happening at a remote Californian location and the film opens with Frank (Reeves) and Lindsay (Ryder) meeting at the airport, developing an almost instant mutual disgust.
As Madea frantically drives out of the parking lot, she goes to a nearby gas station to refill her car. As Cora tries to rush for them to get out of here and about to take the cart back, Madea takes the cart and throws it off across the parking lot, causing it to violently wreck into another car, triggering its alarm and force the trio to frantically flee the scene. This article’s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. But there’s little else to cinematic wedding film Italy recommend it except for the performances. I.e., they set up the actors and shoot the scene several times from various angles, making sure to only have one Perry character visible at a time (or putting doubles in the foreground with a wig on). But there’s no trace of that Perry in the comedies.
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Writer-director Victor Levin (5 to 7) only gives us two characters in this one-act play disguised as a movie. It doesn’t help that both are among the most negative people anyone could expect to encounter anywhere, making it truly puzzling why anyone would invite such apparent losers to their nuptials. An enjoyable enough 85 minutes which has a certain amount of sparkle, this comedy of two people who hate the world has ample charm but little in the way of story. The fact that Reeves and Ryder fail to interact with any other characters makes the film a little claustrophobic and constricting, despite the bright and colourful visuals.
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Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder play a pair of misanthropes who end up stuck at the misanthrope table at a destination wedding, then presumably go on to bond and form an unlikely romance. Yet it works as a valentine to old-fashioned star power — two modern legends, older if no wiser, daring the audience to somehow love them for all their faults, and on that level, somehow succeeding. The best part of her character is simply Lindsay’s endurance; the negativity spewing from her mouth also tests positive for honesty, bravery and a vocal acknowledgment of her limitations. Frank simply fought back, which allows Reeves to merge his action-pic persona with his experience in romantic comedy.
What’s your story? What are ya’ll into? How do you spend your days? What’s important in life? etc, etc…
” “Close,” replies Frank, “I believe there’s nobody for anyone.” Clearly, the film is more in love with the characters then they are with each other. Speaking of dialogue, they’re the only people in the film with any (and they have a lot of it). I suggest giving it a chance, hate the characters, get to know them, and grow to love them, just as they grow to love each other.
(A lot of filmmakers—even the great Martin Scorsese, who once wanted to be a priest—are more exciting to watch when they’re depicting bad people.) Perry, as usual, is the credited writer and director in addition to playing multiple characters from Madea’s family, the Simmons, including Madea’s wild-haired, shambling, rascally brother Joe and their earnest son Brian, a prosecutor (played by Perry without special makeup). It doesn’t introduce any story complications, much less any real stakes for the characters, until more than halfway through its running time. Even though it’s the latest in his series about his most famous character, the combative but goodhearted grandmama Mabel “Madea” Simmons, and is, like nearly all of the rest, fitfully amusing but slovenly and easily forgotten.
While the thought of adventuring around the world to celebrate their love sound amazing. Kelly and Tom and fifty members of their family and friends flew from to US, to Ireland, to celebrate Kelly and Tom’s wedding day at Rahinnane Castle. Reeves is pretty great at making Frank as unlikable as he claims to be, down to a weird throat-clearing tic that suggests someone who doesn’t spend much time in public. Perhaps it’s telling that Reeves is absent from that scene. ” There was all the kooky coquettishness, the brainy charm that made her a star to begin with, not simply reproduced, but smartly transposed to this particular character’s neuroses.
They’re horrible to each other from the minute they’re thrown together on a flight, passive-aggressively jousting over packets of airline peanuts, shared taxis and the awkward rehearsal dinners. Initially, at least, the pair carry this meet-rude premise with some enjoyable anti-charm and a few decent lines. It will require all your love for the pair to hang in there as they take turns to exchange jaded worldviews, between lengthy sessions of carping, bitching and gloomy introspection. Nearly every other character is essentially a cameo or an extra. Ryder and Reeves’ screen presence works every joke as well as they can, and it definitely works more often that it doesn’t.