17 reviews
This is a typical lifetime movie, but you know what? We still like to watch them. Intriguing and you get hooked despite pretty much knowing exactly what's going to happen. This was one of those. I just wish the climax at the end with the sister was more realistic.
This film is sooooo bad it hooks you
Dreadful waste of time
The mother in law wasn't far off cuckoo either
Unbelievably awful, acting is dreadful and storyline so predictable, psycho bride killing everyone she sees as a threat to her perfect life, its a bit like Stepford Wives meets Sweeny Todd with sugar coated cupcake schmaltz.. still it is a low budget movie
- juliacaroline-47073
- Mar 24, 2021
- Permalink
As others have said, stupid storyline, horrendous acting by entire cast. It's hard to believe people get paid for this garbage. Come on IMDB. Give us a minus option.
- carnstabba-55672
- Jun 26, 2021
- Permalink
- robhingston
- Apr 28, 2020
- Permalink
This is one of the worst films I have ever seen. There are several moments that are very stupid. American 'obvious' film. In many situations, normal people would react very different, in this film... the obvious things are not understood by the characters. If you want to get nervous because of the stupidity of the film, and maybe laugh, then, watch it, this film is for you.
- samuelhospi
- Jan 8, 2020
- Permalink
The idea of a woman who gets engaged to and then murders men is exciting, but it was ruined by the cop-out "mental problems" ending. The villain always has some traumatic past that causes mental issues and makes her kill people. For once, why can't they just be a funny sociopathic type killer? Or have a motivation that doesn't have to do with mental health (like maybe money?). That idea would've been way better.
- aprilsfriendorin
- Apr 24, 2021
- Permalink
A WEDDING TO DIE FOR FOR/DEADLY VOWS
(TV movie 2017)
5.5 out of 10 stars Time to Read: 2:15 min
BASIC PLOT: Charlie Dillon (Cameron Jebo) believes he's finally found the woman of his dreams! Helena (Brittany Underwood) is smart, sexy, successful, and shares his traditional values. His parents, Nancy (Kathryn Leigh Scott) & Stuart (Henry LeBlanc) couldn't be happier. Their adopted daughter, Becca (Charlene Amoia), has recently divorced, and the family is hoping this wedding will fill the hole left by Becca's failure.
Helena is a pastry chef, and even has her own business. She tends to be a bit overprotective when it comes to her baking. So, when Nancy suggests they use her friend, Mrs. Mazurek (Darleen Pickering Hummert), to cater the wedding, Helena becomes enraged. She recovers herself, but not before Becca decides her future sister-in-law might be a bit unhinged.
Becca decides to do a little investigating, and what she finds is just the frosting on the cupcake...
WHAT WORKS: *THE OVER-THE-TOP MELODRAMATIC ACTING IS PERFECTION It's supposed to be a cloying throw back to the 50's, and it works! Helena's 1950's dresses, the fact that baking is her life, her "old fashioned values", all of this makes it hilarious, campy fun. It's a silly, diverting caricature of a Stepford wife, except this time the Stepford wife fights back. Helena lures you in with her bonhomie, but what lurks behind her smile is something much more ominous.
WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THE SOUND There is something seriously wrong with sound, when Elena talks to herself in the mirror. You can't understand a word she says. Someone should have caught, and fixed this.
*IT'S LATE ENOUGH FOR PEOPLE TO BE IN BED, BUT MRS. MAZUREK LEAVES HER FRONT DOOR OPEN?! I think every woman watching this knows that's BS! Helena comes to confront Mrs. Mazurek at her bakery. We know it's late, because she calls Nancy, but everyone but Becca is already in bed. But we're supposed to believe a woman alone at her place of business, would leave the front door open, while she's closing up? NO ONE WOULD DO THAT, especially not a 60ish woman, who's ALONE! Give me a break!
*WHEN HELENA HITS MRS. MAZUREK WITH THE ROLLING PIN, SHE DOESN'T EVEN COME CLOSE This really should have been reshot, she's not even close to her.
*BECCA IS PORTRAYED AS A SMART, STRONG WOMAN not the type of person who would put up with being the black sheep. This family treats her like crap, & favors their biological child, without even trying to hide it. I know this is done so they won't believe Becca about Helena, but it doesn't work. All it does is make the Dillon family unlikable, and for this type of melodrama, that's a fail. It would have been better if they didn't believe Becca because her recent divorce left her bitter, but she never seems bitter. Instead, it seems like they don't believe her because they don't like her, and that makes them so unsympathetic, you don't care what happens to them. That doesn't work, these are supposed to be the people you're rooting for. (This is a throwback to the original (The Perfect Bride (1991), where the whole family is mad at the black sheep sister, Laura (Kelly Preston))
*WHY WOULD BECCA TAKE GLENN'S PHONE, INSTEAD OF GIVING IT TO POLICE? Becca invites Glenn (Helena's ex brother-in-law) to come to the house, and confront Helena. Glenn turns on his recorder before he enters the house. Helena attacks him, knocks him unconscious, and the police are called. Becca finds Glenn's phone, but instead of giving it to the police, she takes it, and goes for a drive. WTF!?
TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *I would definitely recommend this to people who UNDERSTAND and enjoy the art form of melodrama. The director, Fred Olen Ray, is successful at making campy, over the top, fun movies, and people who don't like his stuff, should really get a sense of humor. This is not an Oscar winner, IT'S NOT TRYING TO BE! It's a remake of the 1991 TV movie, The Perfect Bride (1991), but the writers (Rolfe Kanefsky) & (Mark Sanderson) decided to go in a hyperbolic direction, exaggerating the characters almost to the point of parody. Helena is a Stepford wife - with a knife! It saddens me to see only a few other reviewers understood the filmmakers intentions. If you like silly, made-for-tv melodramas, you'll love this. If you like reality rooted movies, avoid at all costs.
CLOSING NOTES: *THIS IS A MADE-FOR-TV MOVIE, please keep that in mind before you watch/rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.
*I HAVE NO CONNECTION TO THE FILM, or production in ANY way. This review was NOT written in full, or in part, by a bot. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews (less trolls and fanboys), and better entertainment. Hope I helped you out.
BASIC PLOT: Charlie Dillon (Cameron Jebo) believes he's finally found the woman of his dreams! Helena (Brittany Underwood) is smart, sexy, successful, and shares his traditional values. His parents, Nancy (Kathryn Leigh Scott) & Stuart (Henry LeBlanc) couldn't be happier. Their adopted daughter, Becca (Charlene Amoia), has recently divorced, and the family is hoping this wedding will fill the hole left by Becca's failure.
Helena is a pastry chef, and even has her own business. She tends to be a bit overprotective when it comes to her baking. So, when Nancy suggests they use her friend, Mrs. Mazurek (Darleen Pickering Hummert), to cater the wedding, Helena becomes enraged. She recovers herself, but not before Becca decides her future sister-in-law might be a bit unhinged.
Becca decides to do a little investigating, and what she finds is just the frosting on the cupcake...
WHAT WORKS: *THE OVER-THE-TOP MELODRAMATIC ACTING IS PERFECTION It's supposed to be a cloying throw back to the 50's, and it works! Helena's 1950's dresses, the fact that baking is her life, her "old fashioned values", all of this makes it hilarious, campy fun. It's a silly, diverting caricature of a Stepford wife, except this time the Stepford wife fights back. Helena lures you in with her bonhomie, but what lurks behind her smile is something much more ominous.
WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *SOMETHING IS WRONG WITH THE SOUND There is something seriously wrong with sound, when Elena talks to herself in the mirror. You can't understand a word she says. Someone should have caught, and fixed this.
*IT'S LATE ENOUGH FOR PEOPLE TO BE IN BED, BUT MRS. MAZUREK LEAVES HER FRONT DOOR OPEN?! I think every woman watching this knows that's BS! Helena comes to confront Mrs. Mazurek at her bakery. We know it's late, because she calls Nancy, but everyone but Becca is already in bed. But we're supposed to believe a woman alone at her place of business, would leave the front door open, while she's closing up? NO ONE WOULD DO THAT, especially not a 60ish woman, who's ALONE! Give me a break!
*WHEN HELENA HITS MRS. MAZUREK WITH THE ROLLING PIN, SHE DOESN'T EVEN COME CLOSE This really should have been reshot, she's not even close to her.
*BECCA IS PORTRAYED AS A SMART, STRONG WOMAN not the type of person who would put up with being the black sheep. This family treats her like crap, & favors their biological child, without even trying to hide it. I know this is done so they won't believe Becca about Helena, but it doesn't work. All it does is make the Dillon family unlikable, and for this type of melodrama, that's a fail. It would have been better if they didn't believe Becca because her recent divorce left her bitter, but she never seems bitter. Instead, it seems like they don't believe her because they don't like her, and that makes them so unsympathetic, you don't care what happens to them. That doesn't work, these are supposed to be the people you're rooting for. (This is a throwback to the original (The Perfect Bride (1991), where the whole family is mad at the black sheep sister, Laura (Kelly Preston))
*WHY WOULD BECCA TAKE GLENN'S PHONE, INSTEAD OF GIVING IT TO POLICE? Becca invites Glenn (Helena's ex brother-in-law) to come to the house, and confront Helena. Glenn turns on his recorder before he enters the house. Helena attacks him, knocks him unconscious, and the police are called. Becca finds Glenn's phone, but instead of giving it to the police, she takes it, and goes for a drive. WTF!?
TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *I would definitely recommend this to people who UNDERSTAND and enjoy the art form of melodrama. The director, Fred Olen Ray, is successful at making campy, over the top, fun movies, and people who don't like his stuff, should really get a sense of humor. This is not an Oscar winner, IT'S NOT TRYING TO BE! It's a remake of the 1991 TV movie, The Perfect Bride (1991), but the writers (Rolfe Kanefsky) & (Mark Sanderson) decided to go in a hyperbolic direction, exaggerating the characters almost to the point of parody. Helena is a Stepford wife - with a knife! It saddens me to see only a few other reviewers understood the filmmakers intentions. If you like silly, made-for-tv melodramas, you'll love this. If you like reality rooted movies, avoid at all costs.
CLOSING NOTES: *THIS IS A MADE-FOR-TV MOVIE, please keep that in mind before you watch/rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.
*I HAVE NO CONNECTION TO THE FILM, or production in ANY way. This review was NOT written in full, or in part, by a bot. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews (less trolls and fanboys), and better entertainment. Hope I helped you out.
- vnssyndrome89
- Sep 5, 2024
- Permalink
I love the story ... she is like having dual personalities and the acting is good for me... Plus the dictions and dialogue are quiet good too, It is not slang or hard to understand.What I hate about the movie is the voice whenever she faces the mirror I cannot understand it , it was too loud and noisy...
- johnareidman
- Sep 28, 2018
- Permalink
Even by Lifetime's very very low bar. But the acting and casting are pretty well spot on, and you didn't really tune into Lifetime to see reality, eh? Pastry chef bakes up some killer cupcakes to her male friends and future husbands. The explanation(s) for her bizarre behavior seem to shift and wobble as the movie goes along, but again we're in Lifetime Land. Enjoy.
I love that movie! I've watched it several times and I'm always happy at the end. Yes, it is a bit predictable since the title and trailers give HUGE hints, but the acting, the plot and the dialogue give a very uneasy feeling thought the movie, and I love it. Good thriller. Not too frightning, just enough to be exciting during the whole movie.
- suzenmorgane
- Mar 22, 2021
- Permalink
This is one of those movies where the insanity of the villain is 'deadly' obvious, except only one person actually realizes that something is not quite right.
Helena (Brittany Underwood) is an ambitious fiance. She loves to get engaged, then kill her husbands because they "lie" to her. Underwood strongly embraces the unstable and too-perfect bride-to-be. An interesting twist throughout is Helena's 'other' personality, which speaks to her through a mirror, telling her that no one is trustworthy and that she must get rid of them, including her own fiance, Charlie.
Character Development: Villain: consistently unbalanced. One of the notable traits she possesses is the desire for everything to be "perfect", which should concern those around her, especially Charlie. Where we see a real change is in the discernment of Helena's soon-to-be sister-in-law, Becca. She is the one family member that notices that something is off, that Helena is working too hard to be "perfect" and that her jealousy of Charlie's former girlfriend who is now married and clearly only a friend is both unfounded and strangely self-consuming. There are other clues that alerts Becca, behavior that is too rehearsed and forced to be natural or real.
Pacing/Writing Quality: Well done! There is a lot going on in Helena's head, so with each bit of dialogue, we see more and more of her psychosis. The scenes are engaging due to likeable characters (Charlie, Becca, their parents, and Charlie's pals). There is also an interesting reveal at the end, though it doesn't invade the plot as that would have created another story line and would have taken away from the main plot.
Content (language, sex, & violence): No Language, no sex (not even romantic kissing). Violence is shown, but mostly what is seen is Helena swinging at someone off screen.
I don't understand the reviews. It's not meant to be a shock who committed the crime, it's basically written in the title of the film. The interest is sparked in the story. It's interesting because these are subtle villains. They are scarier than ghosts or even random attacks bc people can appear nice on the surface or perfect on the surface and you would never know. As they say, most murders are committed by someone you know. The main actress has the parents and fiancé fooled with her perfect country bell appearance, whereas others seem to see through the fake persona but they likely all suspect she's just a bit of a mean girl not a murderer. The sister becca plays the character really well. As siblings are a little more inclined to question who their brother is marrying. These subtle bad guys are more intriguing than the typical unrealistic or random villains. So yeah this movie isn't going to make you go wow I wonder who the bad guy is, but it does have a little twist. Which I liked. However even without it, it would have still been a good film to watch. I enjoyed this film. But I like thrillers and lifetime movies.
- mary-179-677383
- Jul 13, 2020
- Permalink
Suzenmorgane ME TOO!! I love this movie, and I have watched it several times ( Watching it now! 🤣) I especially enjoyed Brittany Underwood in this... Even though she was the villan, I loved watching her wear those beautiful dresses, coats, etc. ~ and I loved her hairstyles and makeup! (and her sister's ~ Charlene Amoia) Honestly, fashion-wise..... I think she outdid Rihanna! The movie is very addictive too..
- deannadd1985
- Jul 21, 2021
- Permalink
This movie has many flaws just like most LMN movies. Naive fiancée who trusts someone he doesn't even know. Parents are just clueless. Sister who knows something, but never really comes out and says anything to anybody. Giving the family cupcakes and they all start to yawn and say "I'm feeling very sleepy all of a sudden" and blame it on their "their long days". I get it. I just liked Brittany Underwood in this one. Psychopath that could not give a crap about anybody she killed or harmed. The annoying ones were the parents, Becca and most of all Charlie the "total tool". Brittany might not be a great actress, but she carries LNM movies a lot. C'mon they're LMN movies not made for big screen films.
- agreenskeeperscorp
- Dec 13, 2024
- Permalink