Serial (Bad) Weddings 2

Serial Bad Weddings 2 (French: Qu'est-ce qu'on a (encore) fait au Bon Dieu?, lit.'What have we (still) done to the Good Lord?') is a 2019 Belgian-French comedy film directed by Philippe de Chauveron. It is the second installment in the Serial (Bad) Weddings film series and a sequel to 2014 film of the same name,[5] it follows the Verneuil family, an upper-class French Catholic couple portrayed by Christian Clavier and Chantal Lauby from a French province and their four daughters, three who married men of different faiths and one who married outside their race.

Serial (Bad) Weddings 2
Film poster
FrenchQu'est-ce qu'on a (encore) fait au Bon Dieu?
Directed byPhilippe de Chauveron
Written by
  • Philippe de Chauveron
  • Guy Laurent[1]
Produced byRomain Rojtman[1]
Starring
CinematographyStephane Le Parc[1]
Edited byAlice Polantin[1]
Music byMarc Chouarian[1]
Production
companies
  • Les Films du Premier
  • Les Films du 24
  • TF1 Films Production[1]
Distributed by
Release date
  • 30 January 2019 (2019-01-30)
Running time
98 minutes[1]
Countries
  • France
  • Belgium[2]
LanguageFrench
Budget$18.2 million [3]
Box office$87.8 million [4]

The film was the highest grossing French production in France in 2019 and the third highest-grossing film of 2019 in France. A third installment, Serial (Bad) Weddings 3, is set to be released in April 2022.

Cast

Release

Serial (Bad) Weddings 2 was released in France and Belgium on January 30, 2019.[2] The film grossed over 45 million Euros from 7 million admissions in France which made it break a four-year record for a local language film.[5] The film received a theatrical release in several countries, including Germany, Switzerland and Canada.[5] A third film in the series has been planned.[5]

As of December 1, 2019, the film was in third place on the 2019 chart having attracted 6.7 million admissions, for a box office of $47.7m making it the third highest-grossing film in France in 2019 and the highest grossing French production in 2019.[6] Melanie Goodfellow noted that "In spite of this stellar performance, the box office was 45% lower than for the original 2014 Serial Bad Weddings, which drew a mighty 12.4 million spectators ($91m).[6]

Reception

The film received mixed reviews from critics. Jordan Mintzer of The Hollywood Reporter stated that the film "feels like a slight improvement on the first movie, delivering a few mild laughs amid a similar onslaught of overwrought gags, over-the-top performances and “can’t we all just get along?” messaging meant to lure Frenchies into theaters so they can chortle at their own cultural differences — if not at their countrymen's latent racism."[1] The review concluded that "What may ultimately be most offensive about these movies is not what they’re trying to say, but how they say it."[1]

References

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