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generic?
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* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men. The childhood opening even shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom while re-enacting a wedding.
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* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.fiancé's. The childhood opening even shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom while re-enacting a wedding.
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* RetroactiveRecognition: Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher, before he had his more famous roles in ''Film/JurassicWorld'' and the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse.
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* RetroactiveRecognition: Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher, before he had his more famous roles in ''Series/ParksAndRecreation'' as Andy Dwyer, ''Film/JurassicWorld'' as Owen Grady, and in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse.Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse as Peter Quill; A.K.A. Star Lord.
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Renamed trope
%% * QuestionableCasting: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably unconvincing.
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%% * WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably unconvincing.
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* TooBleakStoppedCaring: A big reason why the movie was panned is because of how unlikable and petty the two lead characters are and how the story is just about them both being vindictive to one another all because both of their weddings were booked on the same day, which itself is an incredibly ridiculous reason for somebody to turn against another.
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* TooBleakStoppedCaring: A big reason why the movie was panned is because of how unlikable and petty the two lead characters are and how the story is just about them both being vindictive to one another all because both of their weddings were booked on the same day, which itself is an incredibly ridiculous reason for somebody to turn against another. The movie does try to portray their conflict as having been building up for years due to Liv's domineering nature and Emma's lack of assertiveness, with the wedding debacle being a catalyst more than anything, but the movie doesn't do much to establish this prior to the inciting incident and so the conflict feels shallow.
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Liv and Emma do track down and ask the third bride to move her wedding date, but she refuses
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* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
to:
* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men. The childhood opening even shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom while re-enacting a wedding.
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** The childhood opening shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom in re-enacting a wedding.
* PlotHole: The third bride being asked or forced to move her wedding date doesn't appear to be on the table at all.
* PlotHole: The third bride being asked or forced to move her wedding date doesn't appear to be on the table at all.
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* PlotHole: The third bride being asked or forced to move her wedding date doesn't appear to be on the table at all.
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** Worth mentioning that as the women are enduring the same stress, Daniel and Liv commiserate and work through it, while Fletcher's observations include that Daniel can't ''control'' Liv.
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"Idiot Plot" is now Flame Bait. Renamed one trope.
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* IdiotPlot: The film's main premise, where Liv and Emma's weddings are booked for the same day, requires major leaps in logic to drive a conflict between the two.
** Simply changing the date of one of their weddings is barely even considered by the characters, with both being too stubborn to give up their wedding for the other. And Liv, being a hugely successful lawyer, could have even taken legal action against the company for the trouble caused by the double booking.
** Considering Liv and Emma have spent their entire childhoods creating a shared fairy tale narrative for their weddings, getting married on the same day could have easily been a ''good'' thing with the two having a double wedding. Though neither would get to be the other's Maid Of Honour, as they'd originally planned, they'd both be able to fulfil their lifelong dream together.
*** This part is acknowledged early on; Emma explicitly states that she and Liv have shared everything before now and she wants at least one thing that is just ''hers'', rather than ''theirs''.
* LesYay: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
** Simply changing the date of one of their weddings is barely even considered by the characters, with both being too stubborn to give up their wedding for the other. And Liv, being a hugely successful lawyer, could have even taken legal action against the company for the trouble caused by the double booking.
** Considering Liv and Emma have spent their entire childhoods creating a shared fairy tale narrative for their weddings, getting married on the same day could have easily been a ''good'' thing with the two having a double wedding. Though neither would get to be the other's Maid Of Honour, as they'd originally planned, they'd both be able to fulfil their lifelong dream together.
*** This part is acknowledged early on; Emma explicitly states that she and Liv have shared everything before now and she wants at least one thing that is just ''hers'', rather than ''theirs''.
* LesYay: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
to:
* IdiotPlot: The film's main premise, where Liv and Emma's weddings are booked for the same day, requires major leaps in logic to drive a conflict between the two.
** Simply changing the date of one of their weddings is barely even considered by the characters, with both being too stubborn to give up their wedding for the other. And Liv, being a hugely successful lawyer, could have even taken legal action against the company for the trouble caused by the double booking.
** Considering Liv and Emma have spent their entire childhoods creating a shared fairy tale narrative for their weddings, getting married on the same day could have easily been a ''good'' thing with the two having a double wedding. Though neither would get to be the other's Maid Of Honour, as they'd originally planned, they'd both be able to fulfil their lifelong dream together.
*** This part is acknowledged early on; Emma explicitly states that she and Liv have shared everything before now and she wants at least one thing that is just ''hers'', rather than ''theirs''.
* LesYay:[[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
** Simply changing the date of one of their weddings is barely even considered by the characters, with both being too stubborn to give up their wedding for the other. And Liv, being a hugely successful lawyer, could have even taken legal action against the company for the trouble caused by the double booking.
** Considering Liv and Emma have spent their entire childhoods creating a shared fairy tale narrative for their weddings, getting married on the same day could have easily been a ''good'' thing with the two having a double wedding. Though neither would get to be the other's Maid Of Honour, as they'd originally planned, they'd both be able to fulfil their lifelong dream together.
*** This part is acknowledged early on; Emma explicitly states that she and Liv have shared everything before now and she wants at least one thing that is just ''hers'', rather than ''theirs''.
* LesYay:
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*** This part is acknowledged early on; Emma explicitly states that she and Liv have shared everything before now and she wants at least one thing that is just ''hers'', rather than ''theirs''.
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%% * RetroactiveRecognition: Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher.
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%% * DesignatedHero: The two leads are incredibly, terribly unlikable and treat each other like shit. Yet they're both treated as the heroes.
* IdiotPlot: Wouldn't getting married at the same time be a ''good'' thing in the whole fairy tale narrative these two want for their weddings? Plus, one of them being a lawyer should mean this company would be getting the crap sued out of it for the accidental double booking.
* IdiotPlot: Wouldn't getting married at the same time be a ''good'' thing in the whole fairy tale narrative these two want for their weddings? Plus, one of them being a lawyer should mean this company would be getting the crap sued out of it for the accidental double booking.
to:
* IdiotPlot:
** Simply changing the date of one of their weddings is barely even considered by the characters, with both being too stubborn to give up their wedding for the other. And Liv, being a hugely successful lawyer, could have even taken legal action against the company for the trouble caused by the double booking.
** Considering Liv and Emma have spent their entire childhoods creating a shared fairy tale narrative for their weddings, getting married
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** The childhood opening shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom in renacting a wedding.
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** The childhood opening shows Liv and Emma dressed as the bride and the groom in renacting re-enacting a wedding.
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* UnintentionallySympathetic: Fletcher. He's the only sane man in this universe and calls out Emma and Liv on their obnoxious behavior. However the audience is supposed to dislike him and see him as controlling because he has the nerve to tell Emma what she is doing is wrong. Unlike Liv's fiancé, Daniel, who just smiles and agrees with everything she does. [[spoiler: In the end, Fletcher's sin of being assertive gets him dumped in favor of Liv's brother Nate. Considering how horrible the protagonists are, it's easy to feel that ''that'' is the real happy ending.]]
to:
* UnintentionallySympathetic: Fletcher. He's the only sane man in this universe and calls out Emma and Liv on their obnoxious behavior. However the audience Fletcher, Emma's fiancé, is supposed to dislike him and see him be seen as a controlling because {{Jerkass}} for critiquing Emma's ideas for the wedding and her rivalry with Liv. Instead he has comes off as an OnlySaneMan for having the nerve to tell Emma that what she is doing is wrong. Unlike wrong, while Liv's fiancé, Daniel, who fiancé Daniel just smiles and agrees with everything she does. [[spoiler: In [[spoiler:In the end, Fletcher's sin of being assertive gets him dumped in favor of Liv's brother Nate. Considering Nate, which is treated as a well-deserved punishment for him. But considering how horrible the protagonists are, it's easy to feel that ''that'' ''Fletcher'' is the one who gets the real happy ending.ending here.]]
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* DesignatedHero: The two leads are incredibly, terribly unlikable and treat each other like shit. Yet they're both treated as the heroes.
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%% * DesignatedHero: The two leads are incredibly, terribly unlikable and treat each other like shit. Yet they're both treated as the heroes.
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Cleanup. Must explain why they were supposed to be sympathetic despite.
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%% * UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: Liv is a whiny ControlFreak, Emma goes from a doormat to an asshole... the audience is supposed to sympathize with them, WHY?
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* RetroactiveRecognition: Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher.
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%% * RetroactiveRecognition: Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher.
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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: Liv is a whiny ControlFreak, Emma goes from a doormat to an asshole... the audience is supposed to sympathize with them, WHY?
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%% * UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: Liv is a whiny ControlFreak, Emma goes from a doormat to an asshole... the audience is supposed to sympathize with them, WHY?
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None
%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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* WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably unconvincing.
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%% * WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably unconvincing.
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* AudienceAlienatingPremise: A story about two unlikable characters being unlikable to each other because their weddings were booked on the same day. Who is this meant to appeal to exactly?
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* DarknessInducedAudienceApathy / EightDeadlyWords: A big reason why the movie was panned is because of how unlikable and petty the two lead characters are and how the story is just about them both being vindictive to one another all because both of their weddings were booked on the same day, which itself is an incredibly ridiculous reason for somebody to turn against another.
* TooBleakStoppedCaring: A big reason why the movie was panned is because of how unlikable and petty the two lead characters are and how the story is just about them both being vindictive to one another all because both of their weddings were booked on the same day, which itself is an incredibly ridiculous reason for somebody to turn against another.
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* WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably uncovincing.
to:
* WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably uncovincing.unconvincing.
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None
Changed line(s) 11 (click to see context) from:
* UnintentionallySympathetic: Fletcher. He's the only sane man in this universe and calls out Emma and Liv on their obnoxious behavior. However the audience is supposed to dislike him and see him as controlling because he has the nerve to tell Emma what she is doing is wrong. Unlike Liv's fiancé, Daniel, who just smiles and agrees with everything she does. [[spoiler: In the end, Fletcher's sin of being assertive gets him dumped in favor of Liv's brother Nate.]]
to:
* UnintentionallySympathetic: Fletcher. He's the only sane man in this universe and calls out Emma and Liv on their obnoxious behavior. However the audience is supposed to dislike him and see him as controlling because he has the nerve to tell Emma what she is doing is wrong. Unlike Liv's fiancé, Daniel, who just smiles and agrees with everything she does. [[spoiler: In the end, Fletcher's sin of being assertive gets him dumped in favor of Liv's brother Nate. Considering how horrible the protagonists are, it's easy to feel that ''that'' is the real happy ending.]]
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* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
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* [[HoYay Les Yay]]: LesYay: Between the two leads, to the extent that they look more like they should be marrying each other instead of their respective generic men.
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* RetroactiveRecognition: [[{{Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy}} Star Lord]] is Fletcher.
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* RetroactiveRecognition: [[{{Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy}} Star Lord]] Creator/ChrisPratt is Fletcher.
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* WTHCastingAgency: Creator/MarkKermode and [[WebVideo/BadMovieBeatdown Film Brain]] found Creator/KateHudson as a high-powered lawyer laughably uncovincing.