Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon are rivals who crash each other's wedding parties in the unfunny Prime Video rom-com "You're Cordially Invited."
Even Will Ferrell understands the power of great bangs. In the upcoming Prime Video comedy You’re Cordially Invited (out Jan. 30), the actor plays a widowed father named Jim who discovers that the wedding venue he booked for his beloved daughter Jenni (Geraldine Viswanathan) accidentally double-booked another wedding party on the same weekend.
Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon’s Prime Video movie seems destined to be a streaming hit. I’m not sure it should be.
Prime Video will release the new comedy 'You're Cordially Invited,' starring Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon, on January 30.
There is really nothing that is not completely predictable about Amazon’s Prime Video latest big budget romantic comedy, but with Reese Witherspoon back in the genre,,and Will Ferrell doing what he does best,
Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell have teamed up for You're Cordially Invited on Prime Video, an outrageous rom-com also featuring Geraldine Viswanathan, Jack McBrayer, Rory Scovel.
The wedding invites are in the mail and June 1 is around the corner, but Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell have just one little problem in their new Prime Video flick, You’re Cordially Invited: The venue they both separately reserved is overbooked.
“You’re Cordially Invited” comes out on Thursday, January 30. The movie will be streaming on Prime Video beginning at 3:00 a.m. ET on the 30th. If you’re an Amazon Prime subscriber, you can watch “You’re Cordially Invited” for free on Prime Video, since the streaming service is included with a membership.
A review of 'You're Cordially Invited' with Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell in romantic comedy in which two families book the same wedding hotel
This Prime Video rom-com is much funnier when its leads are flirting with disaster than it is when they're flirting with each other.
You’re Cordially Invited” unites these two once-ubiquitous box-office forces in a streaming-only wedding comedy that cross-pollinates “Father of the Bride” with “Wedding Crashers.”