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‘You're Cordially Invited' Review: Here Come the Brides

‘You're Cordially Invited' Review: Here Come the Brides

New York Times30-01-2025

I don't know if the romantic comedy is the oldest genre in human civilization, but it's got to be the most durable. Reinvented over and over, it's capable of producing a masterpiece that is also a blast, tugging at hearts and warming them, too. The shape a rom-com takes can reveal a lot about a culture; what we think about power, hierarchies, love and individual agency is all wrapped up in the details we infuse into that resilient narrative arc.
But the main evidence of durability to me is this: When I am in the mood for a rom-com, any one, even a flimsy, janky one, will do. Yeah, I roll my eyes and squinch my face, but it's still somehow satisfying. Had you seen me watching 'You're Cordially Invited,' you'd know what I mean.
It's clear that this film was made expressly for people of about my age, the cohort who made box office hits of the writer-director Nicholas Stoller's previous movies — 'Forgetting Sarah Marshall,' 'Get Him to the Greek,' the 'Neighbors' films — during roughly the years of the Obama administration. They're comedies in the tradition of Judd Apatow, raunchy but kind of sweet, and these in particular take a few memorable surrealist swerves. (Stoller's most recent film, the 2022 rom-com 'Bros,' did not fare as well.) What's more, its stars are elder millennial catnip: Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon.
Ferrell plays Jim, a single dad in Atlanta whose daughter, Jenni (the always-hilarious Geraldine Viswanathan), announces she's getting married to her college sweetheart Oliver (Stony Blyden). A widower since Jenni was a little girl, Jim is a 'girl dad' the way some men are 'wife guys': His life revolves around Jenni, and they're the best of friends. She is all he has, and once he adjusts to the idea of her getting married, he starts to get excited about the wedding. What if they got married at the same inn on the same tiny island where he and her mother tied the knot? Maybe on June 1?
Meanwhile, across the country, the TV producer Margot (Witherspoon) discovers to her delight that her little sister, Neve (Meredith Hagner), is engaged to her beloved Dixon (Jimmy Tatro). Margot isn't on great terms with the rest of the family — their other two siblings (Rory Scovel and Leanne Morgan) and their mother (Celia Weston), all of whom are genteel Southerners — but she's determined to plan the wedding anyhow. Wouldn't it be great if they could have it on the tiny island where Margot and Neve spent summers with their grandmother? Maybe on June 1?
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