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Wedding Crashers follows two wild and crazy single
guys who believe the best place to have fun is –
you guessed it -- at weddings. These shallow pals,
played by Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson, spend
their spare time crashing as many weddings as
possible. They assume various identities and
ingratiate themselves with the members of the
wedding party. Their goal? To bed the bridesmaids
or other attractive female guests. Despite
considerable comic potential, the film falters
because of some silly scenes that make it
difficult to suspend disbelief. Its too-obvious
eagerness for an “R” rating doesn’t help matters
either.
Nevertheless, the first part of this movie, filled
with lively wedding sequences, is hilarious. Both
Vaughn and Wilson evoke hearty laughter as they
engage in antics like claiming to be relatives
(i.e. “Uncle Ned’s boys”), choosing various dance
partners (an elderly lady, a flower girl) to show
their sensitivity, and being photographed with
brides and grooms. The hilarity continues until
the imposters crash the wedding of US Treasury
Secretary Cleary’s (Christopher Walken) daughter.
Wilson falls hard for a second lovely Cleary
daughter (Rachel McAdams, destined for stardom)
while another – seemingly more naïve -- daughter (Isla
Fisher) falls even harder for Vaughn. As soon as
the guys accept an invitation to the beautiful
Cleary estate on Cape Cod, the film unravels
faster than a ball of yarn falling from grandma’s
knitting basket.
Speaking of grandma, there’s a foul-mouthed one
(Ellen Dow) at the Cleary gathering. And a
seductive mom (Jane Seymour) who has more than her
eye on Wilson. And a homosexual brother (Keir
O’Donnell) with a yen for Vaughn. And McAdams’s
obnoxious boyfriend (Bradley Cooper) who’s
suspicious about the two interlopers. Problem is,
none of these characters are very funny – they’re
simply annoying. A “Mrs. Robinson”-type scene
featuring Seymour and Wilson comes across as
especially crass and unnecessary, and so does a
silly sexual encounter between Vaughn and
O’Donnell.
However, the movie’s last wedding scene emerges as
the most unbelievable one in the entire film. A
bridesmaid and best man upstaging the bride and
groom? A bridesmaid leaving her sister’s wedding
during the ceremony? The man she’s engaged to
yelling at her from his church pew? I kid you not.
Because the relationship between the characters
played by Vaughn and Wilson assumes major
importance in Wedding Crashers, comments about the
actors’ rapport are in order. Although Vaughn’s
fast-talking delivery contrasts nicely with
Wilson’s “Aw gee” drawl, this partnership doesn’t
work as well as Wilson’s pairing with Ben Stiller
in Starsky & Hutch or with Jackie Chan in Shanghai
Noon and Shanghai Knights. There’s something
missing here. Maybe Wilson appears too much like
Vaughn’s straight man in this film.
Fortunately, the shallow pals of Wedding Crashers
do find redemption. Like Alfie, filmdom’s ultimate
hedonistic womanizer, they finally realize the
emptiness of their selfish lives. Unfortunately,
by that time, I didn’t care.
(Released by New Line Cinema and rated “R” for
sexual content, nudity and language.)
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