THE WEDDING PEOPLE

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

The Wedding People: A Dark Comedy That Feels Ripe for a Sundance Premiere

Imagine Bridesmaids meets Melancholia, and you’ll land somewhere near Alison Espach’s The Wedding People — a black comedy teetering on the edge of tragedy, wrapped in pastel tulle and Prozac.

This novel practically storyboards itself as a quirky indie dramedy. Phoebe, a literature professor with a crumbling marriage and a bottle of her cat’s painkillers, checks into a ritzy Newport hotel to end it all. What follows, however, is not the introspective, slow-burn drama you’d expect — it’s a collision with a six-day wedding celebration, and a bride who reacts to Phoebe’s suicidal plans not with concern but with irritation: “This is my wedding week.” You can almost hear the line in Florence Pugh’s dry, biting delivery.

Espach directs the plot like a tonal rollercoaster — dark realism gives way to manic farce, and not always smoothly. Still, the narrative has clear visual potential: oceanfront surf lessons, champagne-fueled chaos, a meet-cute in a steamy hot tub. Think Wes Anderson’s hyper-curated style mixed with the existential awkwardness of Noah Baumbach.

Some sequences are pure cinema — awkward, hilarious, and slightly unhinged — while others veer too far into absurdist territory (yes, there is sex with a vintage wedding car). But if handled with the right satirical touch, it could charm on screen the way The White Lotus or Palm Springs did: absurd, stylish, and laced with melancholy.

Uneven as a novel, but with the right director, The Wedding People could make for a delightfully dark rom-com that dares to ask what happens when death crashes a destination wedding.

Genre: Mystery

More to explorer

Jaycee

At its core, Jaycee is about more than one girl’s journey. It is about the universal struggle between faith and doubt, tradition

Busco

What makes Busco stand out is its ability to convey profound themes: love, identity, acceptance, and diversity through a simple, accessible narrative.