One of the best romantic comedies of the 1990s, My Best Friends Wedding not only gave Julia Roberts a delightful vehicle for her crowd-pleasing comeback, but it further distinguished itself by avoiding the conventional plotting of the genre.
Julia plays a prominent Chicago restaurant critic whose best friend (Dermot Mulroney) is a former lover from her college days with whom shed made a binding pact: if neither of them were married by the age of 28, theyd marry each other. Just when theyre about to reach the deadline of their agreement, Mulroney arrives in Chicago to introduce Roberts to his seemingly perfect fiancée (Cameron Diaz) and announce their wedding in just three days.
That leaves the shocked Julia with just three short days to sabotage the wedding and marry the man she now realizes shes loved all along. With potential heartbreak waiting in the wings, shell either get what she wants or pay the price for her selfish behavior, and Ronald Basss cleverly constructed screenplay keeps us guessing to the very end.
Rupert Everett scored rave reviews for his scene-stealing performance as Roberts gay friend who goes along with her scheming (but only so far), and even as she makes her characters needy desperation disarmingly appealing, Roberts wisely allows Diaz to capitalize on her charming time in the spotlight. As the romantic outcome remains uncertain, the viewer is held in a state of giddy suspense, and director P.J. Hogan pulls off some hilarious scenes (like a restaurant full of people singing the Dionne Warwick hit I Say a Little Prayer) that could easily have fallen flat in the hands of a less talented filmmaker.
Its no surprise that this was one of the box-office smashes of 1997. A sure Must Watch movie.