What Happens in Vegas Full Movie Reviews

Full Movie Reviews

MovieAddict
MovieAddict
Producer

Rating of
2/4

Not so bad!

MovieAddict - wrote on 03/04/2012

Jack Fuller (Ashton Kutcher) has just been fired by his own father (Treat Williams) and Joy McNally (Cameron Diaz) has been dumped by her fiancé in front of their mutual friends. They go to Las Vegas to forget their sorrows. A few hours and many drinks later the two find themselves married each other.
When they wake up to reality they want to divorce but just as they're about to part ways, he wins $3 million on the slots, with Joy's quarter.

A cranky judge (Dennis Miller) puts a spoke in their wheel and sentences them six months of forced marriage together or else forfeit the money. They must visit a marriage counselor Queen Latifah and prove they are attempting to save the marriage. Jack and Joy decide to make the life of the other hell on Earth to force to get out of the marriage …

*Sarah*
*Sarah*
Rising Star

Rating of
2/4

*Sarah* - wrote on 12/29/2008

Set in Sin City, story revolves around two people who discover they've gotten married following a night of debauchery, with one of them winning a huge jackpot after playing the other's quarter. Unhappy pair try to undermine each other and get their hands on the money -- falling in love along the way

Well I don't watch films like this normally as from the trailer, I can see that I'm not going to like it. I was right and wrong. What Happens in Vegas is not a terrible film, nor is it a very good one at that. It suffers from lack of orginality and uniqueness. While the plot is slightly orginal at the beginning it falls under the preditcablity plot and you end up feel less satsified than you might have buying the ticket to see the film. While it seems interesting enough the film, for me it …

Franz Patrick
Franz Patrick
Movie God

Rating of
2/4

Not As Horrible As Most People Say

Franz Patrick - wrote on 08/14/2008

It’s not as bad as critics and most audiences claim it is. I think this is one of those movies that became a victim of group think. Don’t get me wrong–it did have forced humour (that either worked or didn’t) and characters making stupid decisions right after another–but none of it is meant to be taken seriously. Since I saw this movie via Netflix, I think I would have been a lot less figiving if I had seen this in theaters because it is not worth the ten dollars. I did enjoy the way Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher’s characters would torture each other. As much as I would like to believe that people like them do not exist, they do. I learned to accept that fact and pretended that I was watching those kind of people interact with each other while watching this film. I thought …

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