The
Wedding Singer (1998)
Rated PG13
Starring: Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore,
and Christine Taylor
Rating:

out
of

|
It's 1985. Robby Hart (Adam Sandler) is a wedding singer in a small New
Jersey town. He makes $60.00 a gig singing on the weekends and receives
meatballs as payment for singing lessons during the week. Julia (Drew Barrymore)
is a waitress at the hall where Robby frequently does weddings. They meet
and hit it off, but they're both committed to other people. In fact, both
are engaged to be married. Of course, they're made for each other, but
don't realize it...yet.
I've stated before that one must disengage all sense of reality when watching
a romantic comedy. You know who is supposed to fall in love with who. The
movie's job is to get them together in an interesting fashion. With that
frame of mind, The Wedding Singer succeeds as a pretty good romantic comedy.
If you're looking for a deep inspection of what makes relationships succeed
or fail, you'll be sorely disappointed.
Sandler's movie career has consisted of a mostly up-and-down series of
films. Bulletproof, the last with him in a starring role, was a fairly
funny buddy comedy and the only one not written by Sandler and Tim Herlihy.
Happy Gilmore and Billy Madison, both written by Sandler and Herlihy, were
often funny, but unevenly so. If one were to assess Sandler on the basis
of these movies alone, he would probably be characterized as having a limited
marketability and range. However, with the addition of The Wedding
Singer to his credits, he may have actually gained a few points in the likability
category. Sandler, for this film at least, tones down most (but not all)
of his angry shouting for laughs. By tempering his outbursts with something
bordering on acting, he makes the transition to leading man. Well, sort
of.
Drew Barrymore handles her role
with her usual likeable flair. Nothing to fault her on at all. Angela
Featherstone and Matthew Glave are slimy
enough in their roles to elicit the proper emotional response from the
audience. There's no empathizing with these supposed "bad partners" ala
last year's Addicted to Love.
My only real complaint with
the film, and it's a small one, is the attempt to be a "look back" at the 1980s. The film takes place in 1985
and that fact is reiterated in what seems like hundreds of 80s references.
Characters dress like Michael Jackson and Madonna. People are constantly
singing songs like "Pass the Dutchie" or "Wake Me Up Before
You Go-Go." A member of Robby's band is androgynous in the style of
Boy George or Dead or Alive's Pete Burns. The hairstyles and the soundtrack's
use of 80s music does more than enough to establish the time period. Too
much of a good thing borders on overkill.
All in all, The
Wedding Singer is a sweet, likeable movie featuring an
unlikely pairing of stars. It's never going to be confused with a great
film in terms of innovation, but it knows what it is and does its job well. Trivia: The
Wedding Singer won MTV's Movie Award in 1998 for Best On-Screen Kiss
(Sandler and Barrymore). (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |