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IMDbPro

Le père de la mariée

Original title: Father of the Bride
  • 1991
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
89K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,165
180
Steve Martin and Kimberly Williams-Paisley in Le père de la mariée (1991)
With his oldest daughter's wedding approaching, a father finds himself reluctant to let go.
Play trailer2:30
4 Videos
99+ Photos
Romantic ComedyComedyFamilyRomance

With his oldest daughter's wedding approaching, a father finds himself reluctant to let go.With his oldest daughter's wedding approaching, a father finds himself reluctant to let go.With his oldest daughter's wedding approaching, a father finds himself reluctant to let go.

  • Director
    • Charles Shyer
  • Writers
    • Frances Goodrich
    • Albert Hackett
    • Nancy Meyers
  • Stars
    • Steve Martin
    • Diane Keaton
    • Martin Short
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    89K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,165
    180
    • Director
      • Charles Shyer
    • Writers
      • Frances Goodrich
      • Albert Hackett
      • Nancy Meyers
    • Stars
      • Steve Martin
      • Diane Keaton
      • Martin Short
    • 151User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Videos4

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    Trailer
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Clip 0:49
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Clip 0:49
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Clip 1:30
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition
    Clip 2:05
    Father of the Bride: 2 Movie Collection - 20th Anniversary Edition

    Photos111

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    Top cast56

    Edit
    Steve Martin
    Steve Martin
    • George Banks
    Diane Keaton
    Diane Keaton
    • Nina Banks
    Martin Short
    Martin Short
    • Franck Eggelhoffer
    Kimberly Williams-Paisley
    Kimberly Williams-Paisley
    • Annie Banks
    • (as Kimberly Williams)
    Kieran Culkin
    Kieran Culkin
    • Matty Banks
    George Newbern
    George Newbern
    • Bryan MacKenzie
    BD Wong
    BD Wong
    • Howard Weinstein
    Peter Michael Goetz
    Peter Michael Goetz
    • John MacKenzie
    Kate McGregor-Stewart
    Kate McGregor-Stewart
    • Joanna MacKenzie
    Carmen Hayward
    Carmen Hayward
    • Grace
    April Ortiz
    April Ortiz
    • Olivia
    Mina Vasquez
    • Marta
    Gibby Brand
    Gibby Brand
    • David
    Richard Portnow
    Richard Portnow
    • Al - the Tux Salesman
    Barbara Perry
    Barbara Perry
    • Female Factory Worker
    Martha Gehman
    Martha Gehman
    • Andrea - the Florist
    Frank Kopyc
    Frank Kopyc
    • Don, the Field Engineer
    David Pasquesi
    David Pasquesi
    • Hanck - the Caterer
    • Director
      • Charles Shyer
    • Writers
      • Frances Goodrich
      • Albert Hackett
      • Nancy Meyers
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews151

    6.689K
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    Featured reviews

    10JosiReviews

    Miss these movies

    Why can't they bring back this genre of movies? Simple, every day life without super drama. Watching a dad have a meltdown over his daughter's wedding is realistic and Steve Martin's character is so relatable. The super market moment with the hot dog buns is hilarious and so dead on. Nowadays it feels like writers/producers have no idea what is happening in the real world. I have watched countless movies where the characters drive new cars and $500k+ houses and are portrayed as the struggling, all-American family lol even though this family has a stunning house, they still come across grounded and humble.
    Webratt

    Hilarious nonsense, but with a deep and meaningfull insight.

    OK, OK, the characters are a little bit "Brady Bunch" - sweet little Annie, the perfect daughter, George, the doting and totally befuddled father, and Nina, the soothing, calming, hold-it-all-together wife and mother. They're a little bit larger than life in this classic comic, but who cares! For any father who loves his daughter, this movie simply can't be watched without feeling a tearing at the heart and a lump in the throat. Father of The Bride can be viewed purely as a bit of light-hearted comedy that mocks the way Dads can sometimes be, but by looking just a little deeper, it contains valuable information that could help many a daughter understand her Dad, and offers many a Dad some consolation that he is not alone, and that someone out there understands the separation pains he is going through as his most precious treasure begins to spread her wings and look elsewhere than the first man she ever loved. This is a tough time for many fathers, and mothers and daughters very often don't understand their erratic, paranoid and irrational behaviour. Father of The Bride explores this phenomenon with what was for me an amazingly accurate depiction of the emotional turmoil that goes on in the head of a man who cherishes his daughter's love and feels threatened and reduntant when another man enters the picture. Goodrich and Hackett have constructed it brilliantly, and Steve Martin expresses it perfectly in this most elegant of love stories. The movie takes some shortcuts - for most of us, the separation pains don't do us the courtesy of waiting till the engagement - they come much earlier than that, when out of the blue some stranger comes into our daughter's life. Martin demonstrates the pain and fear and anxiety that every daughter's Dad feels as some blow-in comes and lays a claim on his beloved child. A must for every Dad with a teen princess, and for the Mums and Daughters I strongly recommend that instead of just laughing and saying "hahahah - that's Dad all over", read between the lines to see just why Dad is the way he is. Loved it every time I've seen it (3 or 4 times now).
    8funky_cherry86

    A Great Wedding Movie

    I've watched Father Of The Bride numerous times over the years and it's still a good family comedy to watch Steve Martin gives a hilarious and heartwarming performance. I laughed at the way Martin's character acted when his daughter announced her wedding plans and the scene that was touching was when father and daughter were outside and snow began falling it was nice.

    Martin Short's role as Franck Eggelhoffer was both comical and very funny. George Banks (Martin) a middle class man and owner of a sports shoe company has it all a great job, a nice house, a beautiful wife Nina (Keaton) and son Matt (Culkin). He's in for the surprise of his life when his 22 year old daughter Annie (Williams) comes home and announces that she's getting married to Bryan MacKenzie (Newburn)a computer genius from a wealthy family.

    From then on George is in a constant state of panic because the wedding will cost too much and the fact that his daughter is grown up. However by the end of the movie he finally accepts that his daughter is an adult and has her own life.

    The rest of the cast gave great performances I recommend this movie to fans of Steve Martin who enjoy his comedy antics 8/10.
    7ElMaruecan82

    Behind every heartwarming wedding, there is one heartbreaking separation ...

    As soon as I finished watching the 90s version of "Father of the Bride", I felt the urge to revisit my review of the original Vincente Minnelli's film, starring Spencer Tracy and Liz Taylor as the titular characters, and I couldn't believe how my feelings in a five-year span hadn't changed one bit (indeed once a father, always a father). The only difference is that five years ago I had only one daughter from a previous marriage, now I have a second and a #3 expected for June... I'm definitely bound to be thrice a father of bride but it's still about my oldest girl who's the closer time-wise to bring me the joy or either the heartbreak to see her become another man's princess.

    Watching Steve Martin as George Banks, I could feel him in every mimic, in every crisped expression or angry intonation of his priceless monologues, in every tender look he gave to his daughter Annie... and that, folks, is the power of being a girl's father, it's a bond that goes beyond what you can imagine: from the day you see that little creature, you want to keep her for yourself. I guess, a boy is different, you want him to outgrow you, to be tougher and bigger but a girl is that little diamond you want to keep preciously in your little heart-shaped box. That's the way it is, and Charles Shyer's "Father of the Bride", slightly rewritten by Nancy Meyers who has the instinct for rom-com, is an enchanting exploration of paternal instinct put at the stakes of the institution of marriage. Or when you stop being "pops" and become the old man behind the young go-getter who came, saw and conquered your darling.

    And so, the whole film, set in these bucolic postcard-like small towns, relies on Steve Martin's comedic timing and it's certainly the best film to showcases his range after "Planes, Trains and Automobiles". Martin has an uncanny ability to play "mature" men finding chaos in rather ordinary situations, and it's precisely because everything is so normal and mundane that his over-the-top reaction are hilarious. If anything, he doesn't imitate Spencer Tracy who was a rock but his infantile attachment to the status quo and refusal to see his girl as an adult that let all the ridicule erupt in a geyser of laughs.

    And Diane Keaton as Nina Banks is the perfect counterpart for (like I always said) she always exuded that tender gentleness, that ability to sweep all the negativity through a radiant smile. You can tell she's happy for her daughter because she sees her happiness beyond her own. And she's caring enough to let her husband get a free pass, until the limit is crossed. Anyway her chemistry with Martin is tangible and as Annie, Kimberly Williams-Paisley has that little something so we can see the little flower from her father's perspective and yet she's confident, assertive and strikes as the one who is able to stand for herself while sweet enough not to hurt him, she finds the right balance and something in her smile and her frailness embodies a certain universal idea of a daughter, while Liz Taylor had already that Goddess-like beauty. Other cast members include Martin Short as the wedding planner Franck Eggelhoffer with such an improbable accent you'd wonder how many continents his ancestry covers and Kieran Culkin who's given a few funny lines here and there (he'll be more present in the sequel)

    The film goes off all the stages of the wedding planning, nothing quite fresh whether you've seen the original or not, but it doesn't try to revolutionize a concept, we get the encounter with the happy future father-in-law and I must say George Newbern is certainly more memorable than his 50s counterpart and is quite believable as a man who could win Annie's heart. Then we get all the financial struggles, George trying to save money by using his own wedding's suit, and a few bits of physical comedy. Speaking of which, If there is one scene that could have been removed without hurting the narrative, that would be that pointless slapstick sequence with the new in-laws (Peter Michael Goetz and Kate McGregor-Stewart) involving a wallet, two dogs and a swimming pool, that part was totally unnecessary and beneath the story, Steve Martin deserved better and fortunately, the film gets rapidly on tracks, so we can feel for the man and his growing claustrophobia as he's surrounded by all the organizational mayhem and so in the night before the wedding, we get to the core of the real heartbreak.

    Indeed, it's during the quieter and most tender moments that you just get what it's all about: a separation.

    As I mentioned in the original film: it's all about these moments that set a before and an after and Annie knows well that there's no coming back and that night before the wedding carries a certain gravity. I mentioned the birth of my daughter in my review, I remember right now the last night before she came to the world, I knew it was a special night, the end of a chapter and a new beginning. One could see either the page that closes or the one that opens, you just don't turn the pages easily and that moment of realization, related in voice-over, during the ceremony (almost the same as the first) hit me really hard and redeemed all the little flaws. In fact, calling "Father of the Bride" a remake is pointless since it tells a rather universal story that any father can relate to.

    I could relate five years ago, I still do and I cherish these years where I can still consider my daughter my special little girl...
    7Smells_Like_Cheese

    Daddy's Little Girl

    I remember a few years ago seeing Father of the Bride on TV, but of course it's edited and I never finished it, it's sad, I call myself a Steve Martin fan and never finished this movie. It's such a classic in itself and is just a nice family film that's a good watch. So I decided to rent Father of the Bride the other day, I just love this movie. It's one of the rare films that is genuinely good and just means to entertain you, your family and friends as well. Steve Martin makes such a great over protective dad, as much as he drives his daughter crazy in the film, you still gotta love him that he's so protective over his baby girl. Father of the Bride is a great comedy and is a good watch with it's sweet story and lovable characters. Before Meet the Parents, there was Father of the Bride.

    George has an excellent life: good job, nice home, beautiful wife, and two loving kids, one of which is his daughter who has just come home from Rome getting her masters in architecture and announces she's getting married to a man she met there, Bryan. George is going crazy, loosing his baby girl so fast and now having to deal with not being the main guy in her life that she will go too for help. George has to also deal with the crazy wedding planner, Franck Eggelhoffer, trying to break up his daughter and her fiancée, and Bryan's rich parents.

    Father of the Bride is a good film and I really recommend it, it's one of those films that you get a few good laughs for and just feel good afterwards. Steve Martin made George such a lovable character, even though he's trying to break up his daughter and her fiancée, you could understand why through his narration and the way he talks, every dad could relate too. Martin Short as Franck Eggelhoffer is a little over done, but still delivers good laughs. Father of the Bride is a just a fun movie that anyone could enjoy, it gives good laughs and might even make you shed a tear.

    7/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Among the wedding gifts Annie receives is a Venus de Milo statue with a clock in the stomach. In the original Le Père de la mariée (1950), Kay also receives this as one of her wedding gifts. Both look at it with disdain.
    • Goofs
      In the supermarket, George says that he's removing 4 hot dog buns from the packet of 12 because he only wants 8 buns to go with 8 wieners. Yet he does this with 3 packets of buns. So if he'd just taken 2 packs of 12, he would have the same amount as 3 packs of 8. But then he probably isn't thinking straight because he's stressed with the wedding plans.
    • Quotes

      Stock Boy: [at a supermarket] Excuse me, sir, but what are you doing?

      George: I'll tell you what I'm doing. I want to buy eight hot dogs and eight hot dog buns to go with them. But no one sells eight hot dog buns. They only sell twelve hot dog buns. So I end up paying for four buns I don't need. So I am removing the superfluous buns.

      Stock Boy: I'm sorry, sir. But you're going to have to pay for all twelve buns. They're not marked individually.

      George: Yeah. And you want to know why? Because some big-shot over at the wiener company got together with some big-shot over at the bun company and decided to rip off the American public. Because they think the American public is a bunch of trusting nit-wits...

      Assistant Manager of Supermarket: [observing from the side] Get me security.

      George: Who will pay for everything they don't need rather than make a stink! Well, they're not ripping off *this* nit-wit anymore because I'm not paying for one more thing I don't need. George Banks is saying no!

      Stock Boy: Who's George Banks?

      George: Me!

    • Crazy credits
      The words The End is cursively written at the end of the movie while George and Nina are slow dancing.
    • Connections
      Edited into Saturday Night Live: Steve Martin and Martin Short/Brandi Carlile (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      My Girl
      Written by Smokey Robinson (as William Robinson) and Ronald White

      Published by Jobete Music Co., Inc.

      Performed by The Temptations

      Courtesy of Motown Record Company, L.P.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 17, 1992 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El padre de la novia
    • Filming locations
      • 843 S. El Molino Avenue, Pasadena, California, USA(Banks family home)
    • Production companies
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Touchwood Pacific Partners 1
      • Sandollar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $89,325,780
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,031,146
      • Dec 22, 1991
    • Gross worldwide
      • $89,325,780
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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