My
Best Friend's Wedding (1997)
Rated PG13
Starring: Julia Roberts, Cameron Diaz, and
Dermot Mulroney
Rating:

out
of

|
After Pretty
Woman, Sleeping with the Enemy and Flatliners, Julia Roberts'
movie career has been less-than-sizzling. Yes, she's been in some fairly
decent movies but, apparently, if a female movie star doesn't rake in
$100 million everytime out, she's perceived as a failure. My Best
Friend's Wedding has been one of the strongest financial successes of the summer,
so it looks like Julia's back in business. I had to see what all the fuss
was about.
Roberts plays Julianne, a food
critic who's had a less-than-successful love life. In college, she had "one hot month" with
Michael (Dermot Mulroney), but they broke it off and decided to be best
friends
instead. They made a pact that if they each weren't married to someone
else by the time they turned 28, they'd marry each other. Well, that time
is approaching when a desperate Michael calls to tell Julianne that he's
getting married. Not to Julianne, but to Kimmy (Cameron Diaz), a 20-year-old
college student who happens to be the daughter of a billionaire (Philip
Bosco).
Julianne is, at first, relieved that Michael hasn't called to propose
to her. But, as she mulls it over, she becomes upset that her friendship
with Michael is in danger of being lost forever. She decides she's in
love with him and travels to Chicago to wreck his wedding with Kimmy and
get Michael back for herself.
The usual pranks and comic situations are, of course, put through their
paces as Julianne schemes to break Michael and Kimmy apart. However, she's
woefully underestimated the love they have for each other. She recruits
her gay friend George (Rupert Everett) to help her by trying to make Michael
jealous. Luckily, the script anoints the characters with actual wisdom
and they don't blindly follow Julianne's cartoonish plans.
A smart romantic comedy is
always a lot of fun to watch. And, make no mistake, My Best Friend's
Wedding is a lot of fun to watch. However, it
lost two stars for one big reason. A romantic comedy's success depends
on the chemistry between the stars. Dermot Mulroney's Michael is, as my
girlfriend so deftly put it, "a dork". He lacks any charisma
whatsoever. Sure, he's handsome, but he seemed to lack any true affection
for Kimmy or Julianne. In only one scene was there evidence of any spark
between Michael and Julianne. So, with Michael not seeming to reciprocate
any of this attention, it's hard to get too upset at the thought of things
not working out between Julianne and Michael. (Or Michael and Kimmy for
that matter.)
Rupert Everett's George, however, had charisma to burn onscreen. In his
scenes -- both with Roberts and with the group of Diaz, Roberts and Mulroney
-- he's tremendously energetic and funny. He seemed to get along with
Julianne much better than Michael ever could have.
Still, My
Best Friend's Wedding does possess a smartness that so many
of today's films lack. It deserves its success on that count alone. Trivia: Rupert
Everett and Julia Roberts were in a movie before My Best Friend's
Wedding. Pret-a-Porter, known as Ready to Wear in the US, was released
in 1994. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |