Download The Wedding Party (1969) Dual Audio [Hindi-English] Movie 480p | 720p | 1080p BluRay ESub

IMDB Rating: 4.7
Movie Title:The Wedding Party
Release Date: | April 9, 1969 (United States)
Director: Brian De Palma, Wilford Leach, Cynthia Munroe
Writers: Cynthia Munroe, Brian De Palma, Wilford Leach
Stars: Valda Setterfield, Raymond McNally, John Braswell
Countries: United States
Languages: English
Movie Details
Full Name: The Wedding Party
Language:Dual Audio [Hindi-English]
Released Year: 1969
Size: 320MB | 640MB | 870MB | 1.7GB | 1.9GB
Quality: 480p | 720p | 1080p
Source: BluRay
Genre: Comedy
Cast : Valda Setterfield, Raymond McNally, John Braswell
Format : MKV
Summary
See Robert DeNiro in his first starring role in Brian DePalma’s wildly comic first feature The Wedding Party!
Storyline:
Charlie and Josephine are to be married in a church on the island off the East Coast where her family, the Fishes, live; the other wedding events will take place in and around the well-off Fishes’ extremely large house. Alistair and Cecil are Charlie’s groomsmen; despite neither really believing in marriage, they believe in love and friendship and will do everything they can to make Charlie’s married life tolerable (they think it will be miserable). Charlie, Alistair, and Cecil arrive on the island the morning of the day before the ceremony, the first time they will actually be meeting for the first time most of Josephine’s very large network of family, extended family, friends, and acquaintances, many of whom border on the eccentric. As Charlie goes through the process of the pre-wedding events, including the stag party, rehearsal, rehearsal dinner, and the minister’s counseling services, some problems arrive, like the Fishes’ trusty servant Baker expressing frustration about his job, Charlie starts to have doubts about marrying Josephine and tries to work his way out of the wedding. If that doesn’t work, his Plan B is to sabotage the wedding. This film is less a “will he or won’t he make it to the church on time?”; rather, it’s a satire on the rituals associated with weddings; excerpts from the fictional etiquette book “The Compleat Bridegroom” are presented as title cards to these events, followed by the mess of the actual event.
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