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Quatro casamentos e um funeral by Mike…
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Quatro casamentos e um funeral (original 1994; edition 1994)

by Mike Newell (Director), Hugh Grant, Andie Macdowell

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354372,830 (4.01)3
Romantic comedy about a young man who meets the girl of his dreams at a friend's wedding. However, she slips through his fingers when the timing seems wrong, and they meet at three more weddings and a funeral before the two finally connect.
Member:mmmcosta
Title:Quatro casamentos e um funeral
Authors:Mike Newell
Other authors:Hugh Grant, Andie Macdowell
Info:
Collections:Cinema
Rating:
Tags:Comédia

Work Information

Four Weddings and a Funeral [1994 film] by Mike Newell (Director) (1994)

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» See also 3 mentions

English (2)  German (1)  All languages (3)
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A single man repeatedly meets a woman at weddings.

2/4 (Indifferent).

I have no idea who any of these characters are. The entire movie feels like you just dropped in on it channel surfing. ( )
  comfypants | Nov 16, 2020 |
Amazon.com essential video
A surprise hit and one of the highest grossing films ever to come out of Great Britain, this effortlessly enchanting romantic comedy finds confirmed bachelor Hugh Grant (Nine Months) attending weddings with his single friends as they all lament not being able to commit. Grant keeps running into an attractive American (Andie MacDowell) at these festivities and begins a long-running affair with her, even as he attends her own wedding, the funeral of one of his best friends, and his own pending nuptials. Featuring a spirited supporting cast including Kristin Scott Thomas (The English Patient) as the acerbic friend quietly in love with Grant, this touching and funny film with a mischievous sense of humor and some truly heartbreaking moments is destined to become one of the classic romantic comedies of all time. --Robert Lane
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  schotpot | May 13, 2007 |
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The only good bit came when you realised that the titular funeral would be dedicated to Simon Callow. I clenched my fist and said yes. No particular disrespect to Simon Callow – but at least one of them was going to die...

In any postwar decade other than the present one, Four Weddings would have provoked nothing but incredulous disgust. A Sixties audience would have wrecked the cinema. Yet now it seems that the old grievances have evaporated, and ‘the million’, as Hamlet called them, feel free to root for the (congenital) millionaires. They can lapse into a forgetful toadyism, and abase themselves before their historical oppressors. Class is harmless, class is mildly cool; class is even felt to be … classy. Four Weddings is of course deeply ‘sentimental’ in the colloquial sense: it displays a false and unworthy tenderness.
added by SnootyBaronet | editNew Yorker, Martin Amis
 

» Add other authors (1 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Newell, MikeDirectorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Atkinson, RowanActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Bevan, TimProducersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Bower, DavidActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Callow, SimonActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Coleman, CharlotteActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Coulter, MichaelCinematographersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Curtis, RichardScreenwritersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Fleet, JamesActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Grant, HughActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Hannah, JohnActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
MacDowell, AndieActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Redgrave, CorinActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Scott Thomas, KristinActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Thompson, SophieActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Matthew: Gareth used to prefer funerals to weddings. He said it was easier to get enthusiastic about a ceremony one had an outside chance of eventually being involved in. In order to prepare this speech, I rang a few people, to get a general picture of how Gareth was regarded by those who met him: 'Fat' seems to have been a word people most connected with him. 'Terribly rude' also rang a lot of bells. So very 'fat' and very 'rude' seems to have been a stranger's viewpoint. On the other hand, some of you have been kind enough to ring me and let me know that you loved him, which I know he would have been thrilled to hear. You remember his fabulous hospitality, his strange experimental cooking: the recipe for "Duck à la Banana" fortunately goes with him to his grave. Most of all, you tell me of his enormous capacity for joy. When joyful, when joyful for highly vocal drunkenness. But I hope joyful is how you will remember him, not stuck in a box in a church. Pick your favourite of his waistcoats and remember him that way. The most splendid, replete, big-hearted, weak-hearted as it turned out, and jolly bugger most of us ever met. As for me, you may ask how I will remember him, what I thought of him. Unfortunately, there I run out of words.
Tom: I never expected "the thunderbolt." I always just hoped that, that I'd meet some nice friendly girl, like the look of her, hope the look of me didn't make her physically sick, then pop the question and, um, settle down and be happy. It worked for my parents. Well, apart from the divorce and all that.
Fiona: The truth is... well, the truth is, I have met the right person, and he's not in love with me, and until I stop loving him, no one else really has a chance.
Fiona: I was a lesbian once at school, but only for about fifteen minutes. I don't think it counts.
Charles: Ehm, look. Sorry, sorry. I just, ehm, well, this is a very stupid question and... , particularly in view of our recent shopping excursion, but I just wondered, by any chance, ehm, eh, I mean obviously not because I guess I've only slept with 9 people, but-but I-I just wondered... ehh. I really feel, ehh, in short, to recap it slightly in a clearer version, eh, the words of David Cassidy in fact, eh, while he was still with the Partridge family, eh, "I think I love you," and eh, I-I just wondered by any chance you wouldn't like to... Eh... Eh... No, no, no of course not... I'm an idiot, he's not... Excellent, excellent, fantastic, eh, I was gonna say lovely to see you, sorry to disturb... Better get on...
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Romantic comedy about a young man who meets the girl of his dreams at a friend's wedding. However, she slips through his fingers when the timing seems wrong, and they meet at three more weddings and a funeral before the two finally connect.

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