Bride Wars Rated 〈Instant Download〉
In the pantheon of early 2000s cinema, few films have been as uniformly dismissed by critics yet as stubbornly beloved by audiences as Gary Winick’s Bride Wars (2009). Starring Kate Hudson and Anne Hathaway at the peak of their rom-com powers, the film currently holds a staggering on Rotten Tomatoes. The consensus reads like a eulogy: “A shrill, unfunny comedy that wastes its two talented leads.”
By: Film Culture Desk
Let’s be honest: the spray-tan scene where Liv turns orange is comedy gold. The “Hathaway Hula” dance scene is iconic. The film knows it is absurd. When Candice Bergen (as the wedding planner) deadpans, “I feel a colon blockage coming on,” she is signaling to the audience that we are allowed to laugh at the insanity. The Legacy: A Blueprint for the “Female Rage” Rom-Com Looking back, Bride Wars was a precursor to a specific genre we now call “unhinged female comedy.” Before Hacks or The White Lotus made female rage chic, Bride Wars showed two women who were not supportive. They were competitive, petty, and destructive. bride wars rated
But if you judge it as a midnight movie —a loud, colorful, anxiety-fueled scream into the void of wedding industrial complex—it is a masterpiece of its niche. In the pantheon of early 2000s cinema, few