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This comedy series explores the story of four American friends who are having a unique experience by attending a wonderful wedding in London. The wedding turns into a strange course after a bomb explodes on the altar, where everyone is thrown into turmoil. In those moments, the four friends must set their course on whether it is a noisy year of exotic romance in their lives.
CRITICS OF "Four Weddings and a Funeral - Season 1"
AV Club
It's those subversions of rom-com convention-isn't the series' most solid love story Maya and Ainsley, after all?-that allow this new Four Weddings to shine.
Four Weddings and a Funeral isn't trying to uproot a genre, but to offer a light, entertaining entry into it. It does that much, if little more. Whether it's enough is up to the audience.
Mostly, Four Weddings and a Funeral plays like a cynical grab for attention, based on the not-entirely-faulty assumption that any form of name recognition is an advantage when it comes to making noise in a crowded streaming universe.
Hold the rice. Something has gone seriously amiss when a romantic comedy fails to charm or amuse to such a degree that you pine for four (or more) funerals and not the "I dos."
A workable and often likable ensemble comedy that earns a passing grade, but struggles to transform the ideas of the original film in significant enough ways to become essential TV viewing.
"Four Weddings" steadies itself, and forges bravely ahead - an unapologetic romcom that embraces all the cliches of the genre absent, at least consistently, all of its charms.
While each episode that contains one of the main five events serves us up something close to the emotional impact of the original, the episodes in between feel too watered down to say anything.