Review: “The Wedding Plan” is an offbeat-but-poignant rom-com

BRAD WHEELER
PUBLISHED MAY 12, 2017
The Globe and Mall

The Wedding Plan is a 2016 Israeli film written and directed by Rama Burshtein, originally titled Through the Wall.

TITLE: The Wedding Plan
WRITTEN BY: Rama Burshtein
DIRECTED BY: Rama Burshtein
STARRING: Noa Kooler, Amos Tamam, Oz Zehavi
GENRE: Comedy
CLASSIFICATION: PG
COUNTRY: USA
LANGUAGE: English
YEAR: 2016

Her fiancé dumps her, but, in for a penny, in for a shekel, 32-year-old Michal decides to go ahead with her big fat Jewish wedding anyhow. “It’s a small task for God to find me a groom by the end of Hanukkah,” she says.

Love may or may not be blind, but faith definitely is. The Wedding Plan is an offbeat-but-poignant Israeli rom-com from Rama Burshtein, the writer-director responsible for the 2012 melodrama Fill the Void. Delicate, lonely and dating in a hurry, Michal (Noa Kooler) has a “nutty energy.” The God-fearing suitors she is presented with are a curious collection, but Burshtein never plays for easy laughs.

A deaf man who brings along a sign-language interpreter asks Michal why she agreed to meet him after previously turning him down. “Despair” is her reason for reconsidering; the honesty is crushing for all concerned. The Wedding Plan should not be confused with the 2001 Hollywood thing The Wedding Planner. While the latter shoved a hopeless plot down our throats, the former takes an improbable premise and makes it believable.

Source: www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/film/film-reviews/review-the-wedding-plan-is-an-offbeat-but-poignant-rom-com/article34957507/

Published On: 21 Sivan 5781 (21 Sivan 5781 (June 1, 2021))