The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
Quotation forthcoming.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Kat Coiro
Cast
Jennifer Lopez,
Owen Wilson,
Maluma,
John Bradley,
Sarah Silverman,
Chloe Coleman
Genre
Romance,
Comedy,
Music
Explores the possibilities of what might happen when a superstar marries an average Joe as a joke and discovers that perhaps there are no accidents.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
Quotation forthcoming.
IndieWire by Kate Erbland
But while that stew sounds familiar, Marry Me takes almost too long to get really cracking, with both romance and laughs in short supply, until a mercifully charming final act.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
An engaging if undemanding romantic outing, newfangled enough to be social media-current, old fashioned enough to warrant bringing the whole family. Just remember to brush your teeth afterwards.
The Independent by Adam White
In an era in which many of Lopez’s romcom peers – namely the Witherspoons and the Bullocks – have pivoted to dark dramas, it’s lovely to see her still banging the drum for a genre that’s never earned the respect it’s deserved. Then again, she knows what that feels like.
Entertainment Weekly by Leah Greenblatt
It's all cream puff, a featherweight fairytale too shiny and mild to attempt the better movie about midlife romance and second chances that might have been.
Chicago Tribune by Nina Metz
I don’t know if this was due to the budget or COVID, but Marry Me feels small in ways that a big commercial rom-com frequently doesn’t and maybe that’s why you can’t fully shake the feeling that this Universal Pictures project is really just a marketing scheme cooked up to highlight Lopez’s real-life music career and some NBCUniversal properties, including the frequent cutaways to a decidedly unfunny Jimmy Fallon, which may be, ironically, the movie at its most honest.
Slashfilm by Hoai-Tran Bui
Marry Me feels like a satirical movie that missed the joke. It doesn't have a plot as much as a collection of rom-com tropes — Fake marriage! Reverse "Notting Hill"! Evil exes! School mathalons? — and is strung together by the whisper of a narrative structure. But while "Marry Me" is silly, poorly made, and inarguably a bad movie, I had dumb fun.
The Playlist by Lauren J. Coates
Even with a handful of toe-tapping songs written by Maluma and JLo specifically for the film Marry Me is an off-tune rom-com that should make most viewers think twice about saying “I do.”
TheWrap by Carlos Aguilar
It’s better than nothing to mark the cheesy holiday, but the lack of effort shows.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
Jennifer Lopez is radioactively humourless and Owen Wilson is robotically bland in this stinker.
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