The Wedding Planner Movie Script
Mary Fiore is the wedding planner. She's ambitious, hard-working, extremely organized, and she knows exactly what to do and say to make any wedding a spectacular event. Bt when Mary falls (literally) for a handsome doctor her busy yet uncomplicated life is turned upside down - he's the groom in the biggest wedding of her career! Will she help him walk down the aisle with his internet tycoon girlfriend, or will Mary finally get to be the bride herself?
When it comes to love, you can never plan what's going to happen. This is a very simple movie and as we know simple is a sweet and wonderful thing. Everything about this movie is crying out for a peaceful, slow evening movie.
The actor and actress are smart and did good job. I like the role of the Jennifer Lopez very much. Especially in the movie her acting is very good and her speaking style is also very good. This is my first film of her.
Her performance is very good and also the directors also done very well in the movie. It is very funny. How I say that it is comedian movie I don't know about this. Because some time it make us very sad. It is very good romantic movie but I am sure that this movie won't win any Oscars award, but if you're in the mood for a good romance comedy, this one should be at the top of your list. Let your brain rest, sit back, and enjoy.
The Wedding Planner is a 2001 romantic comedy film directed by Adam Shankman, written by Michael Ellis and Pamela Falk, and starring Jennifer Lopez and Matthew McConaughey Plot. At the movie, Mary and Steve dance but as they are about to kiss a heavy downpour forces them to run for cover.
With: Mary Fiore - Jennifer Lopez Steve Edison - Matthew McConaughey Fran Donolly - Bridgette Wilson-Sampras Massimo - Justin Chambers Penny - Judy Greer Salvatore - Alex Rocco Mrs. Donolly - Joanna Gleason Mr. Donolly - Charles Kimbrough Dr. John Dojny - Kevin Pollak Basil St.
Mosely - Fred Willard Burt Weinberg - Lou Myers Dottie - Francis Bay Geri - Kathy Najimy “The Wedding Planner” is an attractive bridesmaid but hardly a gorgeous bride among romantic comedies. Displaying early signs that it aspires to revive the urbane elegance of Ernst Lubitsch and the snap-crackle-pop dialogue of Howard Hawks, this tale of mismatched lovebirds begins with considerable charm but eventually loses its winning ways with an excess of ridiculous elements. In this way, pic by tyro helmer Adam Shankman is not unlike a wedding spoiled by too much of everything, when some scaling back would have sent the crowd home happy. Nevertheless, Jennifer Lopez’s fan base will pour out for opening-week reception, with steady numbers to follow in an early February honeymoon. More Reviews Though its disheartening to witness Pamela Falk and Michael Ellis’ script fall short of its promise as a sophisticated romancer — an increasingly rare animal in Hollywood — this comedy is good news for co-stars Lopez and Matthew McConaughey.
Taking a sharp left turn from her unconvincing dramatics in “The Cell,” Lopez is far more comfortable in this classy San Francisco setting, displaying a knack for playing both a control freak who knows all one can know about nuptials and a woman falling nutty in love. 3d sexvilla 2 full download for android. McConaughey has never been sexier or more charming, generating a warmth that seems much more his metier than his various unsatisfying action characters.
Early scenes show that Mary Fiore (Lopez) knew what she wanted to be when she grew up: Whether it’s setting up Barbie’s rite of passage or a nervous bride’s in the present, Mary is the wedding planner par excellence, handling things with the authority of a TV director at the Olympics. Working under Geri (Kathy Najimy), who owns a successful San Francisco wedding-planning business, Mary is easily the firm’s best handler, and demands to become Geri’s partner if she lands the lucrative account of the wealthy, high-tech business clan the Donollys, whose strong-willed daughter Fran (Bridgette Wilson-Sampras) is about to be married. Mary’s private life is a lonely affair. Dad Salvatore (Alex Rocco, playing a first-generation Italian immigrant and almost tongue-tied by the accent) eyeballs Mary’s childhood mate, Massimo (Justin Chambers), whom she disliked then and has no time for now. Like a clueless, innocent bulldog, Massimo is deaf to Mary’s signals and promptly announces that he’s marrying her — launching the movie’s increasingly dumb subplot. A freak accident involving her Gucci pumps lands Mary in the rescuing arms of Steve (McConaughey), a pediatrician with charm to burn.