You’re Cordially Invited (now streaming on Amazon Prime Video) lures us to Yet Another Goddamn Destination-Wedding Rom-Com with stars Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell, who go mano-a-mano in a love-hate-love-hate-love-hate plot that has to end on one of those notes,
Are you with Reese Witherspoon or Will Ferrell? “You’re Cordially Invited,” a new comedy directed by Nicholas Stoller, brings together two stars whose movie worlds are nearly as divided as wedding guests on separate sides of the aisle.
Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell are an awkward couple in the new rom-com "You're Cordially Invited." Maybe they'd have been better off as friends?
You’re Cordially Invited” unites these two once-ubiquitous box-office forces in a streaming-only wedding comedy that cross-pollinates “Father of the Bride” with “Wedding Crashers.”
You’re Cordially Invited” — 2.5 stars Are you with the bride or the groom? Hold on, scratch that. Are you with Reese Witherspoon or Will Ferrell? “You're Cordially Invited,” a
Two wedding parties feud after being accidentally booked at the same venue in this movie co-starring Geraldine Viswanathan and Meredith Hagner.
Patrice Bergeron, Tuukka Rask and Andrew Raycroft are having fun — though not at the team's expense — on NESN's version of "ManningCast."
If ever there were a season in need of some lighthearted escapism, this winter would surely be it. So audiences may well embrace Amazon's wedding comedy, "You're Cordially Invited" -- streaming on Prime January 30th — as the equivalent of fast-food comfort.
Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell play the sister and father of two brides fighting over the same venue in Nicholas Stoller's winning comedy.
Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon can’t quite salvage a comedy that's as overcrowded as the dueling nuptials it depicts.
Eli Manning told Fox News Digital his brother Peyton Manning is looking to steal his strategies and playbook in hopes of defeating him at the 2025 Pro Bowl in Orlando, Florida.
The most surprising thing about this by-the-numbers comedy, in fact, is that it comes to us from writer-director Nicholas Stoller. He updated Kermit & Co. so delightfully in “The Muppets,” tartly reconceived the revenge rom-com with “Forgetting Sarah Marshall,” and scored on the small screen with both “Platonic” and the updated “Goosebumps.”