Gulf Today

‘Four Weddings’: Light-as-air remake with an appealing cast

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Maya (Nathalie Emmanuel, “Game of Thrones”) is a communicat­ions director for — and also lover of — a senator from New York who turns out to be a two-timing creep.

Badly disillusio­ned, she heads to London, where some college friends, like Duffy (John Reynolds), Craig (Brandon Mychal Smith) and Ainsley (Rebecca Ritenhouse, currently starring as Michelle Phillips in “Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood”), are living. But en route, she meets Kash (Nikesh Patel), a handsome investment banker, and she is smitten all over again. Some weddings and a funeral ensue.

Mindy Kaling and veteran producer Jonathan Prince (“American Soul”) created this adaptation of the 1994 big-screen hit, with an assist from Richard Curtis, who also wrote the original.

MY SAY: How do you take something that was light as a balloon in the first place, then stretch it out over 12 episodes? You make a stretchy balloon (that’s how) and hope it doesn’t pop in the process. Not as easy as it sounds, either. The original movie doesn’t offer much of a road map because the entire plot was given away in the title, albeit slightly out of order (three weddings, then a funeral and finally that last wedding). The rest of the thing was a master class in effective screen chemistry (Andie Macdowell’s and Hugh Grant’s).

Enter this TV remake, which nearly pops in the first five minutes and (nearly) again in the last five minutes of the opener. Ater that, “Four Weddings” steadies itself, and forges bravely ahead — an

unapologet­ic romcom that embraces all the cliches of the genre absent, at least consistent­ly, all of its charms.

The movie is a quarter-century old, so for a quick refresher, Charles (Grant) is late to a wedding where he is hapless best man, and there he meets Carrie (Macdowell), a mysterious and alluring American. He falls in love, she later marries a member of the peerage and they ultimately end up in each other’s arms.

In homage, the remake opens with the same expletive, repeated a few times over (fans of the movie will recall which one), then heads off in an entirely different direction, mostly by turning into a love triangle (Duffy loves Maya who loves Kash.) There are weddings, and funerals( the fourth episode ), but resemblanc­es between this and the movie are otherwise largely coincident­al or fleeting. (By the way, Macdowell does turn up briefly in the third episode, as Ainsley’s mother.) Emmanuel’s Maya, in fact, is the exact opposite of Macdowell’s Carrie, and Reynolds’ Duffy is only vaguely reminiscen­t of Grant’s Charles. And don’t forget that Maya loves Kash, but this also holds out the possibilit­y that she could end up with Duffy by the 12th episode, too, so... Enough already. I’m losing you, and “Four Weddings” may lose you, too. But do first consider that non-apology.

Mindy Kaling and veteran producer Jonathan Prince created this adaptation of the 1994 big-screen hit, with Richard Curtis who also wrote the original

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Nathalie Emmanuel stars in ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral.’
Tribune News Service Nathalie Emmanuel stars in ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral.’

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