IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
A wannabe bride seeks professional help to find a husband and, in the process, finds herself.A wannabe bride seeks professional help to find a husband and, in the process, finds herself.A wannabe bride seeks professional help to find a husband and, in the process, finds herself.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 4 wins & 14 nominations total
Edwarda Gurrola
- Lola
- (as Flor Eduarda Gurrola)
Lucía Uribe
- Tamara
- (as Lucía Uribe Bracho)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is the kind of films that portrays that women can only have one goal in life: getting married. The plot is absolutely mediocre. There are no plot twists nor entertaining story telling. The humor is not smart at all. If you decide to waste your time watching this, prepare to yourself to watch the worst acting in the recent mexican film industry. Thinking about the amount of wasted money in this makes me feel so bad.
Good movie, with good actors and story. I was totally entertained and found this to be a pleasant diversion on a Wednesday night. Latino actors are very accomplished and know how to project well. Loved them all.
After I stopped, I read all the reviews to see if I should keep going, and so some of my comments are prompted by those.
I apologise for not finishing the movie and still writing a review. I know that's not really fair, but I just couldn't take it anymore and when I read the reviews it seems my problem with the movie wasn't going to go away. I would have persevered if the reviews had been different. Especially as my bar for watching was pretty low since I'm practicing my Spanish comprehension and am watching anything halfway decent as an educational exercise.
I don't think I had an issue with the main character and her cohort being marriage-obsessed. I get that some women are, regardless of the culture they're from. I get that some cultures are very marriage-obsessed and the pressure on any woman after she turns 20 or 21 to get married before she becomes unmarriageable and worthless is real. I wasn't conscious that this was an impediment to my enjoyment of the movie. I enjoy a lot of movies from cultures that aren't mine, with viewpoints that aren't mine.
Unlike some other reviewers, I thought the acting was good - very good. The main actor, Cassandra Ciangherotti, did a great job portraying a very real character. She has an element of Kristen Wiig about her - awkward, funny, very mobile and expressive face. She was completely believable as Ana. I'm going to see what else she's in.
The problem was that I hated Ana. I would have found her selfish, fake, narcissistic, unpleasant, and immature had she been 13 years old. For a character who is supposedly in her late 20s, she's unbearable. She's awful to family, friends, everyone -- and refuses to see it. I thought this movie would be about how the shock of a breakup caused real introspection and growth, but 1 hour and 6 minutes into it I saw no evidence this was happening.
Instead of becoming a better and more mature human being, she just kept getting worse. Ana was so bad that the relationship with the good guy she meets is entirely unbelievable - why on earth does he fall in love with her? What can they possibly talk about? They have nothing in common. What does she have to offer any intelligent, adult man (or anyone)? There is nothing to Ana except her self-absorption and obsession with doing anything it takes to get married.
TL;DR - The main character (not the actress) is an awful human being and I feel like her awfulness was cross-cultural.
I apologise for not finishing the movie and still writing a review. I know that's not really fair, but I just couldn't take it anymore and when I read the reviews it seems my problem with the movie wasn't going to go away. I would have persevered if the reviews had been different. Especially as my bar for watching was pretty low since I'm practicing my Spanish comprehension and am watching anything halfway decent as an educational exercise.
I don't think I had an issue with the main character and her cohort being marriage-obsessed. I get that some women are, regardless of the culture they're from. I get that some cultures are very marriage-obsessed and the pressure on any woman after she turns 20 or 21 to get married before she becomes unmarriageable and worthless is real. I wasn't conscious that this was an impediment to my enjoyment of the movie. I enjoy a lot of movies from cultures that aren't mine, with viewpoints that aren't mine.
Unlike some other reviewers, I thought the acting was good - very good. The main actor, Cassandra Ciangherotti, did a great job portraying a very real character. She has an element of Kristen Wiig about her - awkward, funny, very mobile and expressive face. She was completely believable as Ana. I'm going to see what else she's in.
The problem was that I hated Ana. I would have found her selfish, fake, narcissistic, unpleasant, and immature had she been 13 years old. For a character who is supposedly in her late 20s, she's unbearable. She's awful to family, friends, everyone -- and refuses to see it. I thought this movie would be about how the shock of a breakup caused real introspection and growth, but 1 hour and 6 minutes into it I saw no evidence this was happening.
Instead of becoming a better and more mature human being, she just kept getting worse. Ana was so bad that the relationship with the good guy she meets is entirely unbelievable - why on earth does he fall in love with her? What can they possibly talk about? They have nothing in common. What does she have to offer any intelligent, adult man (or anyone)? There is nothing to Ana except her self-absorption and obsession with doing anything it takes to get married.
TL;DR - The main character (not the actress) is an awful human being and I feel like her awfulness was cross-cultural.
Even though there were entertaining scenes, it was super hard to watch most of the time.
The main actress is not like able at all, she is super awkward, needy, annoying and childish, plus painfully selfish... whichled her to make a very cruel decision, just to get what she wanted.
The supporting actresses were way more interesting and funny.
It's a shame because the main idea was promising... Good actors, location, but they didn't know how to deliver it (in my opinion of course).
Also, the end sucked, after having watched the entire film just to at least find out how everything was going to turn out, they don't show us much and ends without much warning...
I am actually frustrated with this movie. Won't be recommending this.
I am actually frustrated with this movie. Won't be recommending this.
This is easily one of the worst movies I've seen. Poorly directed, poorly produced, the argument is lame and the acting is awful. I forced myself to watch it until the end just to see if it would get any better, but and the end was like "really!?!?"
Did you know
- TriviaLoosely based on the life story of Ileana Rodriguez "Reclu"
- SoundtracksYo No Te Pido La Luna
Written by Luigi Albertelli, Zucchero (as Adelmo Fornaciari), Enzo Malepasso and Daniela Romo
Performed by Javiera Mena
- How long is Ready to Mingle?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Ready to Mingle
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,450,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $3,231,457
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was L'Ecole des célibataires (2019) officially released in India in English?
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