![]() ![]() Instant classic, cant wait to see it again. Seriously, i saw it a few days ago at an advanced screening, and haven't been able to stop talking about it. What was really great about this movie, which is a large part of any comedy movie being successful, Bridesmaids is infinitely quotable!! (supposed to be all caps, but IMDb told me i couldn't shout hahah but i love shouting!!!!). Bridesmaids is a 2011 American comedy film directed by Paul Feig, written by Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig, and produced by Judd Apatow, Barry Mendel, and Clayton Townsend. It's as if the jokes were tailored to her comedic style, which is probably due to her involvement in the writing process. From beginning to end i couldn't stop laughing, the cast was perfect, especially Kristen Wiig. Anyway, once the trailer started and i saw that the brilliance of Apatow and Feig were collaborating, i had to see it. It was a bit on the rom-com side, but most comedies are. I'd like to make it clear right now, just because a movie has a female cast, that doesn't automatically make it a chick flick (not bashing that sub genre, just clarifying). The title 'Bridesmaids' was a little misleading at first, me and probably everyone else who only heard the title was instantly thinking 'chick flick'. However, Jon's reaction doesn't tell whether he likes it or not. She sticks a slice of ham on his chest and eats them. The home video of Megan (Melissa McCarthy) and Jon (Ben Falcone) is slightly longer. ![]() Shocked by that, she went back downstairs and saw Taylor taking some contraceptive pills before leaving the house hastily. 0:00 / 1:54:20 Bridesmaids (1989) Rare With Commercials TVMovies 65. After Annie goes upstairs, she overhears Pete talking on the phone telling his wife how he missed her and describes Annie as unattractive. While waiting at the living room for Pete to get ready, she has a very uncomfortable conversation with his son Taylor (he's talking about "fear of dying", asking about Annie replacing his mother, etc.). There's a new 5-minute scene where Annie has a date with a guy called Pete.He asks Annie to hand her the disposable shaver and shaves his sister's armpits. When Annie is at the bathroom, Gil (Matt Lucas) and his sister were in the bathtub together.In the new cut, after Lilian admits crapping her wedding dress, Annie starts to feel uncomfortable, gets out of the car and throws up. The car ride with Lillian (Maya Rudolph) and Annie after the bridal store fiasco is longer and different than the theatrical version.Becca (Ellie Kemper) mocks Annie for being single and offers to arrange a date for her.The conversation between Annie (Kristen Wiig) and Mother (Jill Clayburgh) is slightly longer with Mother telling her about Father's "chicken coop" sex act, and it also reveals that Annie's father grew up in a farm.The three protagonists of Bachelorette do some pretty terrible things: They talk trash behind a fourth friend's back, kvetching bitterly about having to be bridesmaids at her wedding.The 131-minute unrated version contains several additional scenes as follows: They publicly leak her old high school nickname, which happens to be "Pigface."Īnd just hours before the wedding, as the bride-to-be is getting her beauty sleep, two of them try to cram into her wedding gown as a gag - she's a plus-sized cupcake of a woman - and rip it seemingly beyond repair.įor the first half of Bachelorette, these bridesmaids from hell - they're played by Kirsten Dunst, Isla Fisher and Lizzy Caplan, and their bride-to-be friend is Rebel Wilson - have no redeeming qualities. It is also possible to buy 'Bridesmaids' on AMC on Demand, DIRECTV, Microsoft Store, Redbox, Alamo on Demand, Apple TV, Amazon Video, Google Play Movies, YouTube, Vudu as download or rent it on Apple TV, Amazon Video, Google Play Movies, YouTube, Vudu, Microsoft Store, Redbox, DIRECTV, AMC on Demand, Alamo on Demand online. But in the second half, glimmers of humanity begin to show through their shallow, brittle facades.Īnd where's the fun in that? One of the most reprehensible bits of marketing-speak to make its way into common usage in recent years is the word "relatable," which, when we're talking about fictional characters, has come to mean figures who somehow reinforce our own vague ideas about how people should behave - chiefly so we can feel better about ourselves. No one should be too mean or too venal, or, for that matter, too nice. ![]()
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