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Why Did I Get Married? (2007)

Why Did I Get Married? Poster

Movie Info


Genre

Comedy, Drama

Release Date

October 12, 2007

MPAA Rating

PG-13

Duration

113 min.

Studio

Lions Gate Films

Official Site

click here

Critics Reviews :  Nothing's perfect, but it's worth seeing.    Reader's Reviews :  Be the 1st!

Cast and Crew


Director

Tyler Perry

Producer

Tyler Perry, Reuben Cannon

Screenwriter

Tyler Perry

Starring

Movie Story


Following the success of his previous films "Diary of a Mad Black Woman," "Madea's Family Reunion" and "Daddy's Little Girls," Tyler Perry returns with his fourth feature film, "Why Did I Get Married?" Stepping in front of the camera for the first time since "Madea's Family Reunion," Perry stars alongside a talented ensemble cast that includes Janet Jackson, Malik Yoba, Jill Scott, Sharon Leal, Tasha Smith, Michael Jai White, Denise Boutte and Lamann Rucker.

A big-screen adaptation of Perry's hit stage play of the same title, "Why Did I Get Married?" is an intimate story about the difficulty of maintaining a solid love relationship in modern times. During a trip to the picturesque snowcapped mountains of Colorado, eight married college friends have gathered for their annual seven-day reunion. But the cozy mood is shattered when the group comes face-to-face with one pair's infidelity. As secrets are revealed, each couple begins questioning the validity of their own marriage. Over the course of the weekend, husbands and wives take a hard look at their lives, wrestling with issues of commitment, betrayal and forgiveness as they seek a way forward.

"Why Did I Get Married?" is written and directed by Tyler Perry, and is produced by Reuben Cannon.

Movie Stills


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Reader's Reviews


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Related News


Lionsgate Gets Double from Tyler Perry
November 18, 2006 09:11:37

MOVIE REVIEWS BY CRITICS

“..proudly flaunts its maker's right to make movies as badly as Bart Freundlich, Peyton Reed, and Woody Allen..”
by Ed Gonzalez [Slant Magazine]
“..Tyler Perry's best screen effort to date, which is to say it's comfortably mediocre instead of criminally intolerable..”
by Brian Orndorf [FilmJerk.com]
“..long, plodding and unctuously well-meaning..”
by Bruce Demara [Toronto Star]