John and Elissa's perfect destination wedding is derailed when their college friends get drunk on tequila.John and Elissa's perfect destination wedding is derailed when their college friends get drunk on tequila.John and Elissa's perfect destination wedding is derailed when their college friends get drunk on tequila.
Nick P. Ross
- Linc
- (as Nick Ross)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Yeah, the plot it's not big deal, and the camera shakes, but the humor is neat, dark, naughty, and shocking. With all that movies with stupid jokes, i'm very glad to have seen this masterpiece. Also i like the characters, they aren't that basic as might seem. The movie is basic, but if you like dark and stupid humor, this movie have a lot of that.
I live in Nicaragua. I was enthusiastic when I heard that they had made a movie in San Juan del Sur which IMHO is the most beautiful place in our country.
Alas, the movie did not catch my interest in any way and the gratuitous sex scenes were in bad taste.
On top of that, there is barely a couple of short scenes showing the San Juan bay and not a single scene of the lovely town. Most of the movie was shot at a hotel and after a while the whole thing felt claustrophobic.
They used cheap equipment to film the thing. So cheap that there were shots where the camera shook when whoever was doing the shooting walked around.
Awful. The only way to put it is awful.
Alas, the movie did not catch my interest in any way and the gratuitous sex scenes were in bad taste.
On top of that, there is barely a couple of short scenes showing the San Juan bay and not a single scene of the lovely town. Most of the movie was shot at a hotel and after a while the whole thing felt claustrophobic.
They used cheap equipment to film the thing. So cheap that there were shots where the camera shook when whoever was doing the shooting walked around.
Awful. The only way to put it is awful.
Nothing profound here...a simple plot where we expect outrageous behavior/situations and uproarious/crude humor. That's all I expected and hoped for. There were a few good laughs but not enough for what this movie was supposed to be, as I just described. I did like the character of Phil, he was amusing throughout. But among this genre there are endless better options. The Hangover this is not...
Who is the the 14 year old virgin who wrote this rubbish?? The actors are awful, their characters are just horrible and it's beyond cringy. Grown men giggling at the sight of each others privates is supposed to be funny NOT funny at all not even one bit. This film is nothing but trash do not watch.
If you wish The Hangover had more of a found-footage feel — and no Bradley Cooper, and more bros getting peed on — here's an offbeat treat for you. You might not have heard of this one, and unless you happened to be at an Alamo Drafthouse this weekend, you probably haven't seen it. But if you're anyone I went to undergrad with, you absolutely should.
Paramount released Drunk Wedding direct to iTunes this weekend. I bought it, and I watched it, and I can report that while you may not know all of the actors and it won't get the usual blockbuster ad campaign, it's quite the tequila-soaked barrel of fun.
Just so we're on the same page here, Citizen Kane this is not. No. Drunk Wedding is a Gonzo faux-doc raunchy travelogue wedding comedy that takes its pants off early and often. It's dialed in tight and quite nicely paced, its modest 1:20 runtime a steady drumbeat of redband-worthy gags, pranks, and awww-shoot moments. Shooting on location in Nicaragua brings immediacy to the action, though the film is not without its issues in this regard: The found-footage style demands a certain gritty realism that doesn't always mesh well with the clearly quite decent cameras actually used here, and the cinematography occupies that strange reality/scripted middle ground that reminds me of an early dose of The Hills. (Nothing that a goat won't fix.) The writing is solid, at times laugh out loud hilarious, but set against the whole average-joes-filming-themselves trope it sometimes feels overwritten, too smart for its premise. (Too clever for your own good, Nick and Tony Weiss?) Interestingly, Drunk Wedding shares something in common with Take Me Home Tonight, another collegiate comedy I really liked: both languished on the shelf for a couple of years before their release.
Quibbles aside, Drunk Wedding is here now and delivers what you're crashing it for — some memorable characters (Dan Gill is terrific as Phil, Nick P. Ross is deliciously creepy as Linc aka Beavis incarnate, and Victoria Gold does a great job as the girls' girl bride Elissa), some quality pranking, and an almost but not quite home movie feel.
This is also the kind of movie you'll want all your friends to see, so your party-prone social circle has ready access to the bank of soon-to-be-iconic-at-least-to-us references. I will say though that if your "hey, this is just like the time" moments overlap very much with this film, your parties are off the flippin' chain, bro.
Haus Verdict: Loved it. Small on budget and big on raunch, Drunk Wedding is just what it sounds like — and if you're in the market for that, take a look.
Paramount released Drunk Wedding direct to iTunes this weekend. I bought it, and I watched it, and I can report that while you may not know all of the actors and it won't get the usual blockbuster ad campaign, it's quite the tequila-soaked barrel of fun.
Just so we're on the same page here, Citizen Kane this is not. No. Drunk Wedding is a Gonzo faux-doc raunchy travelogue wedding comedy that takes its pants off early and often. It's dialed in tight and quite nicely paced, its modest 1:20 runtime a steady drumbeat of redband-worthy gags, pranks, and awww-shoot moments. Shooting on location in Nicaragua brings immediacy to the action, though the film is not without its issues in this regard: The found-footage style demands a certain gritty realism that doesn't always mesh well with the clearly quite decent cameras actually used here, and the cinematography occupies that strange reality/scripted middle ground that reminds me of an early dose of The Hills. (Nothing that a goat won't fix.) The writing is solid, at times laugh out loud hilarious, but set against the whole average-joes-filming-themselves trope it sometimes feels overwritten, too smart for its premise. (Too clever for your own good, Nick and Tony Weiss?) Interestingly, Drunk Wedding shares something in common with Take Me Home Tonight, another collegiate comedy I really liked: both languished on the shelf for a couple of years before their release.
Quibbles aside, Drunk Wedding is here now and delivers what you're crashing it for — some memorable characters (Dan Gill is terrific as Phil, Nick P. Ross is deliciously creepy as Linc aka Beavis incarnate, and Victoria Gold does a great job as the girls' girl bride Elissa), some quality pranking, and an almost but not quite home movie feel.
This is also the kind of movie you'll want all your friends to see, so your party-prone social circle has ready access to the bank of soon-to-be-iconic-at-least-to-us references. I will say though that if your "hey, this is just like the time" moments overlap very much with this film, your parties are off the flippin' chain, bro.
Haus Verdict: Loved it. Small on budget and big on raunch, Drunk Wedding is just what it sounds like — and if you're in the market for that, take a look.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferences Beavis et Butt-Head (1993)
- SoundtracksLive Across The Nation
Written by Geoff Siegel & Nik Frost
Performed by Assassinz
Courtesy of Gramoscope Music
- How long is Drunk Wedding?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Sarhoş Düğün
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $3,301
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,301
- May 24, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $3,301
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
- Color
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