Ali Liebert marries Antonio Cupo. Then next morning she wakes up and it's her wedding day again. Maybe she should have chosen to marry his brother, Shawn Roberts in this variation of GROUNDHOG DAY.
This one starts out slowly and annoyingly, because Ms. Liebert is a neurotic, over-controlled woman with a squeaky voice, Mr. Cupo is an annoying author of books which advocate living sensibly and joylessly and Mr. Roberts is a kind, free-spirited individual who has flown in from his Doctors Without Borders gig, and the wedding is clearly not her best day ever. So you know they are going to get together. Once the living-the-day-forever-until-you-get-it-right plot kicks in, all becomes obvious. Ms. Liebert is engaging as she goes through her evolution in a good performance, which lifts it up again.
There's still the annoying, loud, cloying Hallmark Channel Movie Music to tell you precisely how you're supposed to react to each scene. All these elements make this a watchable movie.
This one starts out slowly and annoyingly, because Ms. Liebert is a neurotic, over-controlled woman with a squeaky voice, Mr. Cupo is an annoying author of books which advocate living sensibly and joylessly and Mr. Roberts is a kind, free-spirited individual who has flown in from his Doctors Without Borders gig, and the wedding is clearly not her best day ever. So you know they are going to get together. Once the living-the-day-forever-until-you-get-it-right plot kicks in, all becomes obvious. Ms. Liebert is engaging as she goes through her evolution in a good performance, which lifts it up again.
There's still the annoying, loud, cloying Hallmark Channel Movie Music to tell you precisely how you're supposed to react to each scene. All these elements make this a watchable movie.