Books Computers Electronics Home & Garden Jewelry
Movies
Music Toys
Search for: in
The Wedding Planner (Special Edition) / My Best Friend's Wedding (Movie-Only Edition)
by Columbia/Tristar Studios
The Wedding Planner (Special Edition) / My Best Friend's Wedding (Movie-Only Edition) - Click to Enlarge
$14.99 to $31.95 from 3 stores
The Wedding Planner
The good news is, yes, Jennifer Lopez can do comedy. In The Wedding P… Read more
Similar ItemsNEW!
Meet the Parents (Widescreen Special Edition)
$5.55 to $21.07 from 9 stores
Mr. and Mrs. Smith
$6.91 to $24.99 from 15 stores

See more below
Information Below:  Store Prices  |  Similar Items


Compare Store Prices
View: All  |  New
Sort By
Store Name
Sort By
Store Rating
Sort By
Price
Sort By
Shipping
 
Description
 
Buy
Overstock.com
Store Info
Be the first to write a review $2.95 The Wedding Planner/ My Best Friend's Wedding (DVD) See it at at
Overstock.com
* Prices and availability are subject to change without notice. Please check the merchant store for details.
List Your Products -
Customers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed

Meet the Parents (Widescreen Special Edition)
$5.55 to $21.07 from 9 stores

Mr. and Mrs. Smith
$6.91 to $24.99 from 15 stores

Bambi (Disney Special Platinum Edition)
$9.95 to $29.99 from 5 stores

Product Description
The Wedding Planner (Special Edition) / My Best Friend's Wedding (Movie-Only Edition)
Description
The Wedding Planner
The good news is, yes, Jennifer Lopez can do comedy. In The Wedding Planner Lopez is Mary, a lovable woman who believes "those who can't do, teach. Those who can't wed, plan!" Her slapstick moments are lighthearted and she is spot-on as the controlling, compulsive-yet-sweet planner. The bad news is Lopez didn't get much of a vehicle in which to test drive her newfound comedic skills. Mary's life is her career. Planning other people's weddings takes all of her time, leaving no room for a love life of her own. Her only personal life is a Scrabble club, to which she and her father (Alex Rocco, whose wandering Italian accent is painful to listen to) belong. When a handsome young doctor (Matthew McConaughey) saves her from a collision with a runaway dumpster (really, it works), she is instantly wooed by his quiet charm. Too bad he's the fiancé of Mary's biggest client, Fran (played winningly by Bridgette Wilson-Sampras), the job that will launch Mary as a partner in her firm. The main problem with this film is that no one wants to hurt anyone else's feelings. Everyone is just so gosh-darn nice. In a subplot, Mary's father is trying to arrange her marriage to just the nicest Italian boy. Gee, he's sweet. Golly, Fran is nice. Is there ever a way out of this mess and to leave everyone smiling? Yet, there is a touch of old-fashioned romance to this wholesome film, which can only be described as "cute." And while things may unfold in a predictable manner, The Wedding Planner is still lighthearted fun of the sort that inspires dreamy romantic thoughts. --Jenny Brown

My Best Friend's Wedding
One of the best romantic comedies of the 1990s, My Best Friend's Wedding not only gave Julia Roberts a delightful vehicle for her crowd-pleasing comeback, but it further distinguished itself by avoiding the conventional plotting of the genre. Julia plays a prominent Chicago restaurant critic whose best friend (Dermot Mulroney) is a former lover from her college days with whom she'd made a binding pact: if neither of them were married by the age of 28, they'd marry each other. Just when they're about to reach the deadline of their agreement, Mulroney arrives in Chicago to introduce Roberts to his seemingly perfect fiancée (Cameron Diaz) and announce their wedding in just three days. That leaves the shocked Julia with just three short days to sabotage the wedding and marry the man she now realizes she's loved all along. With potential heartbreak waiting in the wings, she'll either get what she wants or pay the price for her selfish behavior, and Ronald Bass's cleverly constructed screenplay keeps us guessing to the very end. Rupert Everett scored rave reviews for his scene-stealing performance as Robert's gay friend who goes along with her scheming (but only so far), and even as she makes her character's needy desperation disarmingly appealing, Roberts wisely allows Diaz to capitalize on her charming time in the spotlight. As the romantic outcome remains uncertain, the viewer is held in a state of giddy suspense, and director P.J. Hogan pulls off some hilarious scenes (like a restaurant full of people singing the Dionne Warwick hit "I Say a Little Prayer") that could easily have fallen flat in the hands of a less talented filmmaker. It's no surprise that this was one of the box-office smashes of 1997. --Jeff Shannon

Home  |  About Priceflo  |  Tell a Friend  |  List Your Products  |  Merchant Login  |  Site Map  |  Help

© 2008, Priceflo, Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Service