Why My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997) Remains the Ultimate Romantic Comedy for Realists
Twenty-seven years after its release, My Best Friend’s Wedding still feels refreshingly unromantic—and that’s exactly why we love it. In 1997, director P.J. Hogan gave us a film that looked like a standard rom-com but played like a cunning deconstruction of one. Starring Julia Roberts at her peak, along with Dermot Mulroney, Cameron Diaz, and a scene-stealing Rupert Everett, this movie dared to ask: What if the heroine isn’t the good guy? What if love doesn’t triumph—and everyone is better off for it? Why My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997) Remains the
If you’ve never seen it, stop reading and stream it tonight. If you have, rewatch it for George’s karaoke, for Julia Roberts falling off a water-ski, for that bittersweet final dance to “I’ll Be Seeing You.” My Best Friend’s Wedding isn’t just a great 90s movie—it’s a timeless lesson in letting go. Starring Julia Roberts at her peak, along with
In an era of predictable meet-cutes and third-act breakups, My Best Friend’s Wedding is bracingly honest. It tells us that loving someone doesn’t mean you’re meant to be with them. It reminds us that friendship isn’t a consolation prize—it’s sometimes the truest love of all. And it proves that a romantic comedy can be hilarious, heartbreaking, and deeply satisfying without a single clichéd kiss in the rain. If you have, rewatch it for George’s karaoke,
★★★★½ (4.5/5) Best for: Anyone who’s ever loved a friend, or just loves a good anti-heroine.