Mother of the Bride Review: Formulaic Film Fails to Launch

Tired Tropes Trump Talent

Mark Waters’ “Mother of the Bride” brings together an accomplished cast for a tropical wedding-themed romantic comedy. Brooke Shields stars as Lana, a dedicated scientist whose life is turned upside down when her daughter Emma announces her engagement.

Miranda Cosgrove plays the bride-to-be Emma, who is tying the knot in Thailand with her boyfriend RJ. Adding another twist, the father of the groom is Lana’s ex from college, Will, played by Benjamin Bratt. As Lana travels to Thailand for the destination wedding, long-buried feelings are stirred up between her and Will.

While the beautiful backdrop and likable performers offer mild entertainment, the movie spreads itself too thin trying to balance various storylines. Between Lana reconnecting with her past and guiding her daughter into married life, Emma’s social media influencer career injecting commercialism into the wedding, and a side plot with another handsome doctor at the resort, too many concepts are thrown into the mix. This dilutes the rom-com’s focus and prevents viewers from connecting fully with any of the characters. Ultimately the movie proves too contrived to rise above well-worn romantic comedy tropes.

Plot Overview: Unexpected Reunions in Thailand

The basic bones of Mother of the Bride’s plot are simple – Dr. Lana Winslow flies to Thailand for her daughter Emma’s destination wedding. But Lana receives a major surprise upon arriving: the father of Emma’s fiancé is none other than Lana’s college ex, Will.

Years ago at school, Lana and the charming Will began a romance. However, he suddenly left without explanation after they graduated. Heartbroken, Lana threw herself into her career as a scientist. Now decades later, fate reunites Lana and Will when she least expects it, as they cross paths in Phuket.

Their awkward interactions are peppered with obvious lingering chemistry and memories of what might have been. But Lana remains wary of the past being repeated. Other subplots emerge too – namely, Emma’s wedding being sponsored by influencer deals as more of a content opportunity. The film also introduces another potential suitor for Lana among the resort staff.

Critics took issue with these side plots, seeing them as distracting MacGuffins rather than fully realized characters. The influencer wedding angle in particular comes across as an artificial construction to drive conflict between Lana and Emma.

However, the heart of the film resides with Lana and Will’s rekindled relationship. Through shared smiles and private talks, their connection reawakens – though whether demons from their history can be overcome remains uncertain. As past meets present in Thailand’s tropical paradise, Lana must weigh revisiting past passions versus protecting her heart again.

By weaving Lana’s unexpected reunion with her college sweetheart into a daughter’s destination wedding abroad, Mother of the Bride presents a familiar romantic comedy premise. Yet critics found the paper-thin characters and contrived subplots prevented the central will-they-or-won’t-they chemistry from shining through.

Shallow Leads in Mother of the Bride

Many rom-coms live or die by how relatable audiences find the main characters. Unfortunately, Mother of the Bride fails to give us leads we truly care about.

Mother of the Bride Review

Take Lana Winslow, played by Brooke Shields. Is she a doting mother? A career woman? Both roles seem thrust upon her without much thought. Shields gives her all but can’t make Lana feel coherent with the mix of tones. One moment she’s hysterical, the next coldly logical. We never get a real sense of this woman.

The relationship between Lana and her daughter Emma, portrayed by Miranda Cosgrove, also lacks depth. Emma springs life-changing news on Lana without understanding her perspective at all. Their problems could have fueled funny, touching scenes, but instead feel superficial.

As for Will, who shares a history with Lana, Benjamin Bratt does his best but the character remains an enigma. Why did he leave all those years ago with no closure? Did he have no curiosity about Lana in the decades between? Viewers deserve more insight than is offered.

Even supporting roles like Janice, played by Rachael Harris, are squandered. She’s reduced to one-note eccentricity without any dimensionality. Secondary couples like Clay and Scott, portrayed by Michael McDonald and Wilson Cruz, exist solely to prop up Lana’s story, not their own.

Contrast Mother of the Bride to classics where the romance stems from knowing the leads as real people – When Harry Met Sally’s titular pair or Sleepless in Seattle’s Sam and Annie. Audiences connect because the characters feel authentic, consistent and perfectly cast. Unfortunately for this film, a lack of compelling leads dooms any chance at true heart.

Absence of Sparks in Mother of the Bride

Good romantic comedies live or die on the connection between the leads. Unfortunately for Mother of the Bride, the relationships at its center prove rather lackluster.

Take Lana and Will, played by Brooke Shields and Benjamin Bratt. Their past is hinted at but never fleshed out, so we don’t truly understand what drew them together all those years ago. Now reunited, they exchange pleasant smiles and witty banter, yet show little real passion. Shields and Bratt seem game but are given little intriguing substance to work with.

The same can be said for Lana and her daughter Emma, portrayed by Miranda Cosgrove. Their dynamics shift on a dime without cause, moving from closeness to conflict without credible motivation. Viewers struggle to invest in interactions that feel inconsistent.

As for plot beats around the impending wedding, they unfold in rote, uninspiring fashion. Of course Lana’s ex still carries a torch, of course old flames will be rekindled, of course both mother and daughter learn important lessons. Audiences have seen it all before, without a fresh twist to spice up well-worn tropes.

Compare this to Nora Ephron’s works, where the sparring between Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks crackles with chemistry so tangible, viewers are swept right into their will-they-or-won’t-they journey. Or Richard Curtis’ films, where characters feel thoroughly human and their emotional arcs profoundly touching, as with Emma Thompson and Hugh Grant in Sense and Sensibility.

Regrettably, Mother of the Bride provides no moments so richly entertaining or moving. With cardboard cutouts instead of involving leads, it lacks the heartbeat required to pull viewers deep into its rom-com world.

Lacking Visual Panache

It’s disappointing to see Mark Waters, director of visually striking films like Mean Girls and Freaky Friday, drop the ball with Mother of the Bride. Where those past works expertly used imagery to amplify themes and emotions, here he opts for a bland, workmanlike approach.

Shots are straightforward and forgettable, never enhancing the on-screen action. A comedy this contrived offers chances for flair, like inventive staging of hijinks. Yet Waters misses each opportunity, content to point and shoot in a generic style. Even breezy location shooting in Phuket fails to infuse energy.

Contrast frantic splash shots of Tina Fey dodging dodgeballs to leisurely drone pans over resort backdrops here. Where Colorful, kinetic edits drove the former, staid continuity dulls the latter. Waters once thrived on clever visual gags—think razor-wielding Lindsay Lohan. But flaccid physical comedy here gets no assist from framing or tempo.

It’s a letdown considering characters ripe for exaggerated stylistic treatment, like the hyperbolic influencer Emma. Her digital persona begs a more satirical visual tongue-in-cheek. Alas, she’s photographed as plainly as the rest. Elsewhere, a soapy love triangle demands expressive glimpses into the protagonists’ interior worlds. But static shots keep interpersonal emotions coldly distant.

Mother of the Bride sorely lacks the directorial brio that lifted Waters’ prior romances. He declines opportunities to visually enliven tired conventions through cinematography, angles or montage. Without such flourishes, even scenic backdrops fail to engage viewers hooked by lively visual narratives. It’s one element holding back this middling movie from achieving anything approaches the winsome charm of yesteryear Waters works.

Out of Touch Tropes

Mother of the Bride’s grasp of modern influencer culture proves woefully misguided. Emma decides she’ll plan her entire wedding around sponsorships, yet her lifestyle Instagram depicts only modest student life. Laughably, corporations supposedly offer “six figures” without vetting. This mishandling damages any chance for sharp social commentary.

Elsewhere, sitcom-esque humor feels decades late. Lana’s inevitable pratfalls and malapropisms elicit few chuckles today. Even the cast’s talent can’t salvage stilted lines or broad physical gags. It comes as no surprise a Hallmark veteran penned these tired conventions.

Social themes also prove skin-deep. A storyline about empty-nesters adjusting reads as checklist filler beside lavish backdrops. Meanwhile, a fleeting inclusion of diversity rings disingenuous without dimensionality for secondary gay characters.

Overall, the screenplay prioritizes shallow boxes to tick over meaningful substance. Social media, relationships and social issues serve mere props in a flimsy narrative centered on rom-com formula.

As escapism, Mother of the Bride provides pleasant enough scenery. But by clinging to dated television tropes and glossing over weightier topics, it squanders opportunities for richer cultural critique or humorous social satire. With sharper writing and direction attuned to modern mores, this familiar framework might have resonated more sincerely. As is, it offers banal cheer best left in the superficial past.

Formula Fails to Deliver

At its core, Mother of the Bride relies too heavily on well-worn romantic comedy tropes without bringing anything fresh to compensate. Despite intrigued curiosity around its stars and exotic backdrops, the uninspired script and cardboard cutout characters leave viewers with little to take away.

The promising assemblage of comedic talents like Shields, Bratt and Harris feels sadly wasted in this shallow retread of hallmarks like botched first meetings, love triangles and meddling friends. Though pleasant enough to look at, not even beautiful Thailand locales can salvage the by-numbers plot or lifeless interactions.

With such undeveloped motivations and cookie-cutter scenarios, it’s difficult to invest in the romances at the story’s center. Conflicts arise and resolve in monotonous, unsurprising fashion. Opportunities for nuanced humor or insight are glossed over in favor of rushing to the next expected storyline beat.

While an easy distraction might have sufficed given stronger humor or heart, Mother of the Bride offers little lasting entertainment or introspection. The genre still holds potential for resonant storytelling if writers embrace more meaningful conflicts and multidimensional leads. Until audiences see fresher takes that build on past successes rather than resting on their formulas, the romantic comedy risks growing stale. With imagination and care, the form remains ripe for rediscovery.

The Review

Mother of the Bride

5 Score

In summary, while Mother of the Bride features appealing locations and performers, its unoriginal script and flat characters undermine opportunities for humor or heart. Relying too heavily on well-worn rom-com tropes without notable reinvention, the film ultimately adds little new to the genre.

PROS

  • Attractive cast including Brooke Shields and Benjamin Bratt
  • Picturesque shooting locations in Thailand
  • Light, escapist entertainment for those seeking escapism

CONS

  • Predictable, formulaic plot lacking surprises
  • One-dimensional, underdeveloped characters
  • Stale romantic comedy tropes feel tired and uninspired
  • Little humor, heart or insight beyond surface level
  • Wastes comedic talent of supporting cast

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 5
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