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Rosa Salazar leads the messy yet breezy rom-com thriller Wedding Season

Hulu's latest series fails as an intriguing crime caper but delivers a promising love story

TV Reviews Rosa Salazar
Rosa Salazar leads the messy yet breezy rom-com thriller Wedding Season
Rosa Salazar in Wedding Season Photo: Luke Varley/Disney+

Goodbye, Only Murders In The Building. Hello, Wedding Season. Hulu is clearly inspired to remain on track with genre-bending whodunits after OMITB’s acclaim. On the heels of that show’s season two conclusion last month, the streamer follows up with another darkly comedic thriller, except this one isn’t nearly as enticing. The eight-episode Wedding Season is fun but lacks a certain depth in character development, humor, and, ultimately, final twists.

It’s not that Wedding Season doesn’t have a killer hook to start with: the nuptials of new bride Katie McConnell (Rosa Salazar) end with the groom and his family dead. She’s immediately a suspect, along with her lover Stefan Bridges (Gavin Drea), who interrupted Katie’s wedding hours ago only for her to cruelly reject him in front of everyone. They’re now forced to go on the run, evade cops, and solve the case before multiple murders are pinned on them—unless one or both of them actually did it—while reckoning with their own complicated affair.

The show bounces between the past and present to depict how Katie and Stefan’s relationship began three months ago (yes, just three) when she was already engaged. Her feelings for him notwithstanding, she’s determined to marry her douchebag wealthy fiancé, Hugo Delaney (George Webster). Her agenda to be part of his family isn’t explored until much later, and the results land flatly when it is.

Wedding Season falls short in balancing its genres; it’s far better as an exciting rom-com than an intriguing crime caper. Katie and Stefan personify the whole “opposites attract” trope. She’s tenacious and closed-off. He’s essentially a version of Friends’ Ross Gellar or How I Met Your Mother’s Ted Mosby, a.k.a. a hopeless, bumbling romantic, often to a grating degree. (You just know if Robin Scherbatsky did anything remotely illegal, Ted would drop everything to go and assist her the best he could. Stefan is exactly like that.)

It’s a central love story that requires suspension of logic. From their first meet-cute to a few subsequent dalliances, all of it revolves around different weddings taking place over the summer. It’s a ridiculous gimmick, so Wedding Season hinges completely on Salazar and Drea’s chemistry to pull it off—also evidenced in how Stefan repeatedly obsesses over his chemistry with Katie. Luckily, the gamble works. The actors are instantly charming (individually and as a duo), doling out rich performances despite only surface-level traits. (Stefan’s an orphan and a doctor. We don’t learn much besides that.)

Katie’s background is a bigger question mark because it’s what the mystery is all about. Her half-baked personality is unfortunate because Salazar is a top-notch actor. Even with minimally fleshed-out writing, she morphs Katie into a strong, vulnerable character worth rooting for. (It’s easy to see why Stefan is smitten so quickly.) Similarly, Drea is undeniably charismatic as a rom-com lead himself. Together they generate plenty of momentum even as the mystery starts to drag on. After a certain point, the primary reason to keep going becomes not “Who did it and why?” but “Will the two make it out alive and find a way to be together despite all the secrets?”

Wedding Season | Official Trailer | Hulu

If Katie and Stefan feel underdeveloped as the leads, the supporting cast fares even worse. Stefan is constantly surrounded and helped by his pals, but it’s hard to take them seriously when they’re each saddled with merely a single defining attribute. If Stefan’s the Ted Mosby of this group, Suji (Ioanna Kimbrook) and Jackson (Omar Baroud) have Barney Stinson-level commitment issues, while Anil (Bhav Joshi) and Leila (Callie Cooke) are akin to Marshall and Lily and in deep wedding planning mode. (Forgive the HIMYM comparisons, but Wedding Season’s one-note script demands it.) What’s more, the investigating police officers also get entangled in an unnecessary subplot that derails the story.

Wedding Season takes on more than it can handle in eight half-hour episodes. Subverting a well-established genre is already a tall order, but the show also comes at a time when comedic whodunits are a new TV norm. OMITB, Apple TV+’s The Afterparty, Netflix’s Dead To Me, and HBO Max’s Search Party and The Flight Attendant have recently turned it into a crowded category. The Hulu comedy doesn’t take storytelling risks like its genre counterparts, offering predictable plot twists instead. But Wedding Season succeeds as an escapist binge-watch (all eight episodes drop on the same day, September 8) and a breezy rom-com.

14 Comments

  • cinecraf-av says:

    Rosa Salazar is one of those great actors who seems perpetually poised to break out.  She just needs that right vehicle, be it a series or movie, but they always seem to fall just a little short.

    • nowaitcomeback-av says:

      Her performance in Alita, even though completely exaggerated with CGI, still had so much of her energy and enthusiasm come through, and she’s been great in everything I’ve seen her in since. The projects she’s in are hit or miss but she never misses.

      • cinecraf-av says:

        Yeah Alita was frustrating precisely because it felt like Salazar really gave her all (but then again, when doesn’t she?), but she was undermined by that damn mo-cap CGI.  It all felt like a waste, like casting Phoebe Waller-Bridge in Solo, and then relegating her to the part of a droid.

        • nowaitcomeback-av says:

          It was the first thing I saw her in, and I was genuinely surprised at how much of her presence was still able to come through even with all the CGI.Undone is a bit of the same, in that its’ all animated (over live action, but still), but you still get a sense of her.

          • filmben-av says:

            Yeah to say Rosa’s performance is somehow wasted or hidden by the CGI is really unfair to the artists who made that character so human and emotionally compelling.

        • filmben-av says:

          I don’t agree with that at all. Have you watched the special features with the CGI/Mo-Cap comparisons? Her performance is not undermined by the mo-cap, to the contrary it even enhanced it. I believe she and the VFX team fully deserved Oscar nominations. You’re doing a disservice to both Rosa and Weta Digital who made her a masterpiece digital creation never seen before. Every nuance of her performance is exquisitely rendered and the big eyes serve to draw you in emotionally to what she is going through even in wide shots. I encourage you to revisit Alita and check out how amazingly they put her performance in that character! The closeups especially are phenomenal I do not understand how you can form this opinion.

    • gruesome-twosome-av says:

      The Netflix mini-series Brand New Cherry Flavor should have been a bigger thing. Maybe it was too weird. But anyways, Salazar was great in that.

      • briliantmisstake-av says:

        Brand New Cherry Flavor was interesting and had its flaws, but absolutely worth it to see Salazar and Keener chew the scenery. 

    • dibbl-av says:

      She has become one my favorite actors in recent years, so as long as she keeps doing great work, which I’m sure she will, I’ll be happy – she’s absolutely wonderful in Alita, Brand New Cherry Flavor and Undone.

      • filmben-av says:

        One reason she chose to do this show was to be in a better position at Disney to get the Alita sequel off the ground which I hope will be announced soon after Rodriguez spoke of pitching it with Cameron to Disney earlier in the year. So we should finally get more Alita at least and she has an Amazon Prime movie coming out later this year called ‘A Million Miles Away’ which she’s filming now. She had nothing on her IMDB listed after Wedding Season until a couple weeks back when this Million Miles Away was announced and they’re already filming it. Can’t wait to see what she does next! Hopefully Alita 2 and more!

    • mifrochi-av says:

      I might watch this series just for the chance to see her in live action. What a unique idea! 

  • cura-te-ipsum-av says:

    I saw the Wedding Season movie on Neflix.Close enough?

  • antsnmyeyes-av says:

    So 8s it 9ut now? Tomorrow? Next week?Remember when these reviews used to actually give relevant information like release dates?

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