The reality of "Rachel Getting Married"

by Eric Melin on October 24, 2008

in Print Reviews

Sometimes the most important traits of a person can be observed from the moments they spend in the background. Director Jonathan Demme’s new verite-style movie “Rachel Getting Married” is at its truest when its characters are hiding on the fringes of an event that’s bigger than them.

rachel getting married anne hathawayWell at least its bigger to most all of the family—save for Kym, played by Anne Hathaway, who has been in and out of drug rehab for the past ten years or so since causing a serious family tragedy. It’s a wedding, of course, and how many movie weddings have we seen on film, especially in the form of some contrived mushy piece of crap? Rest assured, “Rachel Getting Married” isn’t like that. In fact, its very title shows there is more at play than a marriage, considering the entire movie is shown from Kym’s perspective and she’s not the one in the title.

Kym stumbles back into her family’s life with all her defenses fortified, ready for the naysayers to pounce on her and convinced that everyone is there merely to witness her colossal blow-up at her sister’s wedding. To the picture’s credit, she’s half right. There are many sides to the family, and the bare-bones plot basically follows the tenets of an upscale, artist-friendly wedding. The actions and reactions of Kym’s family are what really drive the lazy forward momentum of the film forward.

Demme’s handheld camera gives the movie a documentary-like feel. The only music in the picture stems from the narrative as presented—what the camera records—and further enhances the film’s reality. Luckily for the audience, the groom’s family and friends are all musicians, so the movie has a kind of score that occurs within the context of the movie, so it doesn’t feel like a film-school experiment. (Demme’s obsessions remain front and center, with Robyn Hitchcock and Neil Young songs—musicians the director has made recent documentaries about—talking center stage, the former actually appearing on camera as a wedding musician.)

rachel getting married anne hathawayThe screenplay, by Jenny Lumet (legendary director Sidney Lumet’s daughter), gives Hathaway a very real person to inhabit, and it spends a lot of its time putting her through the familiar motions of the “big family wedding.” Therefore, there are not a lot of unnatural plot developments or twists and turns.

Hathaway plays Kym as a woman with the weight of the world on her shoulders; someone you want to look away from but can’t take your eyes off of. “Rachel Getting Married” concentrates on building the characters of Kym, her over-protective father (Bill Irwin), her aloof mother (Debra Winger), and her sister Rachel (Rosemarie Dewitt), who just wishes that for once (during her wedding, of all times!), the focus could be on her and not her needy sister Kym.

The strength of “Rachel Getting Married” is also its main weakness. The shaky cameras and diagetic sound point the film towards an aesthetic that strives to recreate reality. The natural performances by all the lead actors and the film’s choppy editing style enforce that feeling. So when we do witness a big dramatic moment (unfolding at the most inopportune times, as family crises are wont to do), it is buoyed by a million little moments that seem have no immediate consequence, but that all draw a larger picture.

What I’m basically saying is that “Rachel Getting Married” is a slow movie. Take it how you want. Demme’s strategy pays off in that we feel like we’ve spent time with these people and are able to see the little moments that they may have missed in the hubub of the wedding. These glimpses reveal much. In order to achieve that fly-on-the-wall feeling, Demme has sacrificed a quick pace, and he let the camera linger perhaps a little too long on the general revelry of the night.

On the other hand, letting the movie breathe is the key to knowing the subtleties of Kym and her family. Lumet’s plotting may not be clever, but her characterization is, and the actors are up to the task.

Eric is the Editor-in-Chief of Scene-Stealers.com, a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, and contributor for The Pitch. He’s former President of the KCFCC, and drummer for The Dead Girls, Ultimate Fakebook, and Truck Stop Love . He is also the 2013 Air Guitar World Champion Mean Melin, ranked 4th best of all-time. Eric goes to 11. Follow him at:

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{ 9 comments }

1 RCM October 24, 2008 at 11:20 am

Is this movie getting a full US release date?

2 RCM October 24, 2008 at 11:20 am

Is this movie getting a full US release date?

3 mmathers February 22, 2009 at 1:17 am

“Shaky” cameras is an understatement. While this movie strives for “authenticity”, the mushy sound and shaky camera work merely distracts from the overall story.

4 mmathers February 22, 2009 at 1:17 am

“Shaky” cameras is an understatement. While this movie strives for “authenticity”, the mushy sound and shaky camera work merely distracts from the overall story.

5 tommyboy May 3, 2009 at 2:26 am

sHaKy CaMeRa?!?! Forget that! The CONSTANT zoomed in affect never lets the viewer grasp a whole scene. In the theater, it makes you dizzy if you’re not in the very back row, so whatever story was being told, your constantly struggling to pay attention as you’re fighting away nausea from motion sickness.

Authentic?

What exactly is authentic or common about the story?!?! a well-off white woman marries a music industry black man? They have an INDIAN wedding? Dad re-marries or is also dating a black woman? A BEAUTIFUL sentiment, but the whole thing feels contrived.

The first time I attempted to watch this movie, I left half way through the wedding dinner. I thought it was never going to end…

Sometimes movies and their stories are made ridiculous for the sake of being ridiculous. This was one of them.

6 tommyboy May 3, 2009 at 2:26 am

sHaKy CaMeRa?!?! Forget that! The CONSTANT zoomed in affect never lets the viewer grasp a whole scene. In the theater, it makes you dizzy if you’re not in the very back row, so whatever story was being told, your constantly struggling to pay attention as you’re fighting away nausea from motion sickness.

Authentic?

What exactly is authentic or common about the story?!?! a well-off white woman marries a music industry black man? They have an INDIAN wedding? Dad re-marries or is also dating a black woman? A BEAUTIFUL sentiment, but the whole thing feels contrived.

The first time I attempted to watch this movie, I left half way through the wedding dinner. I thought it was never going to end…

Sometimes movies and their stories are made ridiculous for the sake of being ridiculous. This was one of them.

7 Will December 14, 2009 at 12:32 am

Does anybody know what cameras are being used on this film?

8 Will December 14, 2009 at 12:32 am

Does anybody know what cameras are being used on this film?

9 Moss Limbayter January 30, 2011 at 1:37 pm

We left (motion sickness) after 15 minutes, they appear to have $300 cameras (no budget left for tripods) from Walmart and hired Parkinson patients for the camera work.

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