Show Why Did I Get Married?Eight married college friends gather for a reunion, but a startling revelation of infidelity sets off a chain reaction of soul searching. Starring:Tyler Perry,Janet Jackson,Jill Scott
(CC, BB, FR, H, LLL, V, S, N, AA, M) Strong Christian worldview with strong moral premise and elements including positive mentions of Jesus, God and prayer, mitigated by some antinomian permissiveness regarding language, including a few frank sexual references and jokes (not salaciously crude), plus some light references to psychology but religion and moral thinking resolve most of the conflicts, though Christianity and the Bible could and should have been even more central to the story (for example, a psychologist advocates marriage retreats for couples where couples ask themselves Why Did I Get Married? but her concept of retreats is a general one that’s not centered on Jesus, God and the Bible as a church retreat on marriage probably would be); about 54 obscenities (mostly “h” and the “a” words, some “d” words, and one “f” word seems cut off or edited out but may be a blip during the projection of the screening MOVIEGUIDE® saw), one strong profanity and six light exclamatory profanities; man knocked out with bottle; implied adultery and talk about it, woman is clearly attracted to man who is wearing a T-shirt while working on something, and discussion about getting a sexually transmitted disease and needing medicine (most of it discussed euphemistically); brief upper male nudity and some female cleavage; alcohol use and slight drunkenness; no smoking; and, some miscellaneous immorality such as cheating, lying, deceit, and philandering husband is extremely rude to his wife including her weight, but most if not all of the miscellaneous immorality is rebuked in some way or fashion. TYLER PERRY’S WHY DID I GET MARRIED? is an unabashed soap opera, but it has some very funny moments to go along with its well-directed, and well-acted, melodrama. The movie also has a solid Christian worldview, but there is enough foul language and frank sexual references to make it unsuitable for those under 17 or 18. Directed by Tyler Perry, who also stars, the movie is a big-screen adaptation of Perry’s successful stage play of the same title. It is about the difficulties of maintaining a solid marriage in modern times. The story is about four married couples who reunite in the snowcapped mountains of Colorado for their annual marriage retreat together. They are led by Patricia, a popular psychologist and best-selling author. The couples get several surprises along the way. Patricia and her husband, Gavin, share secret grief over a terrible tragedy that they have been refusing to fully face. Angela and Marcus argue constantly, and Marcus has a medical secret that could finally break up their marriage. Meanwhile, Mike, a philandering husband, constantly berates his wife Sheila, a sweet faithful Christian with weight issues. Finally, Terry is getting fed up with his wife Dianne’s total absorption in her legal career. WHY DID I GET MARRIED? is Tyler Perry’s best movie to date. He even shows some considerable acting chops in this sometimes funny melodrama. The rest of the cast does a fine job, especially singer Jill Scott as Sheila, the character suffering the most visible emotional pain in this piece. Like Tyler Perry’s other movies, WHY DID I GET MARRIED? contains a strong Christian worldview with a strong moral outlook. These positive qualities are diminished by lots of PG-13 foul language and some sexual references, including references to having a sexually transmitted disease. This content, and the movie’s mature themes, require extreme caution, especially to those who are sensitive about such matters. One point should be discussed in relation to this particular movie. Patricia, the psychologist in the story, advocates marriage retreats for couples where couples ask themselves “Why Did I Get Married?,” but her concept of retreats is a general one that’s not centered on Jesus, God and the Bible as a church retreat on marriage probably would be. Church retreats for married couples are a great idea that MOVIEGUIDE® supports, but such retreats should focus first and foremost on our personal relationship with Jesus Christ, who is God in the Flesh. They should also focus on explicit biblical principles that the retreat leaders and the couples can glean from God’s Word. The big-screen adaptation of Perry's stage play about the trials of marriage and what happens to one family when a sexy young temptress arrives on the scene.The big-screen adaptation of Perry's stage play about the trials of marriage and what happens to one family when a sexy young temptress arrives on the scene.The big-screen adaptation of Perry's stage play about the trials of marriage and what happens to one family when a sexy young temptress arrives on the scene.
Reuben CannonStarring
Production Tyler Perry Studios Release date
Running time 113 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office$55.9 millionWhy Did I Get Married? is a 2007 American comedy-drama film adaptation written, produced, directed, and starring Tyler Perry. It was inspired by Perry's play of the same name. The film also stars Janet Jackson, Jill Scott, Malik Yoba, Sharon Leal, Tasha Smith, Michael Jai White, Richard T. Jones, Denise Boutte, and Keesha Sharp. The film was released in the United States by Lionsgate on October 12, 2007. The film is about the difficulty of maintaining a solid relationship in modern times. Plot
Four couples, who are also best friends since college, converge in a house in the mountains for a week-long retreat. This ritual of sorts aims to help them work out their marital problems and ask the question "Why did I get married?". Though the couples have committed to being physically present for the week, some of them have not been emotionally present in their respective marriages for quite some time. The week is not planned out in a well-programmed sequence, so the events unfold somewhat spontaneously, beginning with their "adventures" in getting up to the mountain retreat.
Dianne falls asleep not long after arriving with her BlackBerry close by hand. When her secretary calls while she is asleep, Terry tells her not to call them while they are on their vacation. When Patricia arrives, she goes up to wake Dianne while the men bond over the wine that Terry has poured for his wife. The sound of arguing signals the arrival of Angela and Marcus. When Mike arrives without Sheila, the other wives berate him and Trina for having left Shelia to drive alone. Mike shows complete disregard for his wife and disparages her weight. Her friends try to reach Sheila by phone but get her voice mail only. Sheila is persistent to get to the retreat because she wants to make her marriage work. Providence leads her to Sheriff Troy Jackson (Rucker)'s office. Due to the weather, the roads have been closed for the night and she has no choice but to spend the night in the office. That same night, Mike is caught by Angela going to Trina's bedroom. Sheila arrives at the retreat house the following morning with Troy in tow. She introduces Troy to the others and tells them she has invited him to breakfast. Troy becomes a threat to Mike, not because of Sheila, but because of Trina. Breakfast is a noisy affair with the arguing couples and Angela insulting Trina, whom she instantly disliked. Throughout the few days spent on retreat, there are spontaneous revelations. The infidelity of Marcus and Mike leads to a discussion by the men of the 80/20 rule. According to this rule, most men get 80% of what they need from a marriage, yet they tend to go after the 20% that someone outside can provide for them because it appears to be more to them when it really isn't. During a heated argument at dinner, Angela exposes Mike and Trina's affair. In turn, Mike reveals the other couples' hidden secrets: Marcus had contracted VD after he cheated on Angela, Dianne had her tubes tied after her daughter was born without Terry's knowledge and withheld disclosing her disinterest in having another baby, Terry had gotten an DNA test on him and Diane’s daughter because he was unsure he was the father ,and Gavin had criticized Patricia for not protecting their young son in a fatal car accident a year prior. Angela admits giving Marcus the STD from her own cheating. Enraged, he tries choking her while the others pull him away. Mike then tells Sheila he wants a divorce, and she smashes a wine bottle over his head, knocking him out. All the couples suddenly decide they can't stay in the house any longer. Sheila checks into a local hotel to recover from her divorce and that Mike had drained her bank account. She is in a depression when Troy goes to visit her. He takes her up to a mountain where she cries and mourns the loss of her love and the only life she knew. The other couples head back home. Patricia and Gavin are barely speaking to each other after the revelation of the latter calling the former "stupid" for not protecting their son during the time of the accident. Eventually, she breaks down emotionally and confesses that she was only trying to be perfect. They both agree to face the situation and soon reconcile. Angela and Marcus are still fighting, especially when Marcus' ex-girlfriend and baby mama, Keisha (Whitehead), shows up at Angela's salon, and disrespects her. This happens again when the couple arrives at her house for the kids. Marcus finally stands up to both women and frightens Angela into realizing she is wrecking their life with her constant arguing by disappearing for a few days. On Terry's birthday at their home, Dianne accuses Terry of wanting her to be a housewife, while he calls her out for neglecting him and their daughter. He moves out as he feels Dianne constantly prioritizes her career over them. Patricia meets up with Dianne and Angela, moping over their husbands, and gives them good counseling about the need to get back on track: making a list of both the good and bad things their husbands have done. In the mountains, Sheila settles into a new life at her new job at the general store owned by Troy's father. The two bond while she gradually realizes her self-worth. Angela cooks dinner for Marcus after finishing with her list. Although he suspects she is trying to poison him at first, they reunite and set new conditions. Dianne goes to see Terry and begs him to come back home after crying over her list. He plays with her head a little to get back at her, but they eventually reconcile as well. Some time later, the couples converge at a gala celebration for an award recently received by Patricia. She, Dianne, and Angela are elated when Sheila arrives, re-introduces Troy as her new husband, and has successfully lost weight with his help. Troy meets up with the husbands, who are also gladly surprised by the news of his and Sheila's marriage. Although Mike's still with Trina, he tries to weasel his way back into his ex-wife's good graces, but she turns him down, telling him to go enjoy Trina. Patricia encloses a confession of her love for Gavin and a message of loving, respecting, and trusting God in her acceptance speech. Cast
LocationsAgnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia, USA; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Pemberton, British Columbia, Canada; Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Whistler, British Columbia, Canada.[1][2] Production and developmentPerry decided to take out many of the church and message scenes because he wanted the film to be "on a whole 'nother spiritual level--there's a whole 'nother connection to it." He said his writing has improved since the play.[3] Perry invited experienced and neophyte African-American actors to a reading of an early script in order to field reactions, including Danny! and Tracee Ellis Ross.[4] ReceptionCritical responseReview aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 48% based on 42 reviews, with an average rating of 5.50/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Despite some poignant observations on modern marriages, Why Did I Get Married? is too preachy and melodramatic."[5] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 54/100 based on reviews from 12 critics.[6] CinemaScore polls reported that the average grade moviegoers gave the film was an "A+" on an A+ to F scale.[7][8] Paul Grenada said that while "there are times where the script seems stiff,...[the film] teaches without hammering, and you leave the movie feeling good about what you saw."[9] Giving the movie a B−, Entertainment Weekly said that Perry is of the "spell-everything-in-capital-letters and act-it-out-loudly schools," but added that "one performance glistens--Jill Scott's as the sad, heavyset Sheila, who locates the faith that's the source of love."[10] Time magazine gave the film a B and called it the "usual artless mix of broad comedy, teary confessions and spiritual uplift."[11] Box officeIn its opening weekend, the film grossed $21.4 million in 3,105 theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #1 at the box office.[12] In its second weekend, the film slipped to #2 in the box office charts, with a gross of $12.1 million, bringing the 10-day total to over $38 million.[13] In total, the film domestically grossed $55,862,886. SoundtrackThe soundtrack was released by Atlantic Records on October 2, 2007. Neither Janet Jackson nor Jill Scott are featured on the soundtrack. The soundtrack debuted at number 51 on Billboard 200, number seven on R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and number six on Soundtracks with 58,000 copies sold in first week.[14][15]
Home mediaThe film was released on DVD on February 12, 2008. The DVD includes subtitles in English and Spanish, as well as bloopers. A Blu-ray was released on November 23, 2010. Awards and nominations
SequelA sequel, titled Why Did I Get Married Too? starring Perry and the original cast, was released on April 2, 2010. Subsequently, Perry created a comedy-drama television series based upon the two films titled Tyler Perry's For Better or Worse. The series, which stars White and Smith as Marcus and Angela, premiered on TBS on November 25, 2011. In June 2021, Perry entertained the idea of revisiting the franchise with a film called Why Did I Get Married Again.[citation needed] References
External links
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