You’re Cordially Invited to sit through this laugh-free movie
Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon team up to be typecast in this dreadful wedding comedy.
Photo: Amazon MGM Studios
The last truly funny, downright gut-busting, Will Ferrell performance was The Other Guys. Most of Ferrell’s best comedies were made with filmmaker Adam McKay, mid-2000s classics like Step Brothers, Anchorman, and Talladega Nights. But ever since Ferrell played off against Mark Wahlberg as a pair of pencil-pushing cops hoping for their chance at crime-stopping stardom (and Ferrell and McKay’s fruitful partnership eventually came to an end), the returns on his comedic work have greatly diminished. He plays the same character, iterations on the same bumbling goof prone to temper tantrums, which McKay had a firmer grasp on mining genuine jokes and better performances out of. Even Ferrell’s small role in Barbie—his funniest performance in years—is another attempt at resurrecting the past. This is all to say that Nicholas Stoller’s You’re Cordially Invited is just another rung on the ladder of disappointment which has come to define Ferrell’s post-McKay acting career; emblematic of the laziest instincts of modern mainstream comedies and the inability of filmmakers to make Ferrell’s schtick feel fresh.
The bumbling, good-natured—if hair-trigger—oaf that Ferrell has made his signature endures once more as widowed father Jim, whose young daughter Jenni (Geraldine Viswanathan) breaks the news that she’s marrying her DJ boyfriend Oliver (Stony Blyden). Shocked and upset at first (a profane outburst ensues in place of actual comedy), Jim relents and happily books his daughter’s wedding venue at the very location where he and Jenni’s mom got married. But when the elderly owner dies in the middle of trying to jot down Jenni’s booking, the owner’s son Leslie (Jack McBrayer) accidentally double books them with the wedding of Neve (Meredith Hagner) and Dixon (Jimmy Tatro), handled by Neve’s older, girlboss sister Margot (Reese Witherspoon).