Destined to be one of those much-touted Hollywood discovery stories, Nia Vardalos' one-woman play "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" was seen by Rita Wilson (Mrs. Tom Hanks) and ultimately conceived as a film for veteran bad-TV director Joel Zwick (Hanks' "bosom buddy," as it were). The results are predictably sloppy, all expansive gestures, big emotions, and ethnic sitcom generalities that were handled with more intelligence and wit by Moonstruck.
The sad reality of My Big Fat Greek Wedding's stultifying predictability and stand-up sensibility (what plays well as a monologue translates clumsily as film narrative) is that there are enough broad stabs at overbearing mothers and in-law tensions that folks will come away from the film mistaking a warmth for their own experiences with an over-abundance of affection for My Big Fat Greek Wedding.
Toula (Vardalos) is a mousy, unattractive wallflower working at her parents' Greek restaurant when the man of her dreams Ian (John Corbett) wanders in for a gyro. Swiftly undergoing a minor makeover, applying for community college, and getting a job at a travel agency, Toula and Ian are reunited--with only their wacky culture-gap standing in the way of eternal wedded bliss.
The film's sources of comedy are reliably lowbrow and obvious (apparently Greeks are more emotionally expressive than WASPs), and the performances go from over-practiced (Vardalos) to underwhelming (Corbett) to extraordinarily obnoxious (Michael Constantin as an overweening father, Andrea Martin as a big-mouthed aunt)--but My Big Fat Greek Wedding skates by on the strength of a pretty good pace and the comfort inherent in works of art free of controversy.
There is no need for anything resembling an active viewership as the picture is the quintessential vacuous movie-going experience--a summer movie for the more chronologically mature and more independent film-oriented crowds that disparage mainstream audiences for demanding the same from bigger-budgeted but no less cacophonous fare.-Walter Chaw
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Buy the MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING poster at Moviegoods (click on image)
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HBO won the home video rights to My Big Fat Greek Wedding and releases the picture on DVD just before Valentine's Day. Presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen and unmatted fullscreen versions on the same side of a dual-layer platter, the transfer starts off overly grainy, remaining so until the lengthy opening credits sequence has ended. The cleared-up image is bright and relatively clean though unspectacular; ditto the 5.1 Dolby Digital soundmix, which is so undistinguished that there's nary a difference between it and the 2.0 surround track. The Home Country-flavoured score, by Chris Wilson and Alexander Janko, is typical of the other audio elements in that it rarely reaches around behind the viewer. LFE info is AWOL.
The DVD's only item of bonus material besides a set of cast bios is a film-length commentary featuring stars Nia Vardalos (pronounced Varr-dal-ose) and John Corbett in addition to director Joel Zwick. A group effort, Vardalos nevertheless dominates (hey, it's her show), discussing Windex (natch), the roots of many of My Big Fat Greek Wedding's jokes, and her family's reactions to the word-of-mouth sensation. Zwick becomes a glorified teleprompter (his offhand observation "Now here's Lainie Kazan" triggers a lengthy anecdote from Vardalos) and Corbett hasn't much to contribute, and for a yakker with three participants, there's dead air in peculiar abundance. The white keepcase is a nice matrimonial touch.-Bill Chambers
© Film Freak Central; filmfreakcentral.net. This review may not be reprinted, in whole or in part, without the express consent of its author.
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DVD GRADES:
Image B+
Sound B+
Extras C
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DVD VITALS:
RunningTime
95 minutes
MPAA
PG
AspectRatio(s)
1.85:1, 16x9-enhanced/
Standard 1.33:1
Languages
English DD 5.1, English Dolby Surround
CC
Yes
Subtitles
English, French, Spanish, Greek
DVD-9
Region One
HBO

walter

bill
What's coming out on DVD? Check the release calendar
Published: January 26, 2003
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