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Father
of the Bride (1950)
In director Vincente Minnelli's domestic comedy about
a wedding ceremony:
- the opening voice-over narration and flashback of
harrassed father, Stanley Banks (Oscar-nominated Spencer Tracy),
talking to the camera about the stresses before (and after) a lavish
June wedding for his daughter Kay (Elizabeth Taylor), and his recollections
of how she had grown up so fast to become engaged - with an extravagant
marriage ceremony imminent: ("I would like to say a few words
about weddings. I've just been through one. Not my own, my daughter's.
Someday in the far future, I may be able to remember it with tender
indulgence, but not now. I always used to think that marriage was
a simple affair. Boy and girl meet, they fall in love, get married,
they have babies. Eventually the babies grow up, meet other babies,
and they fall in love and get married, and so on and on and on.
Looked at that way, it's not only simple, it's downright monotonous.
But I was wrong. I figured without the wedding")
- Stanley's desire to "get a peek at this Superman," her
fiancee, Buckley Dunstan (Don Taylor) and the lengthy, one-sided "man-to-man" financial
talk they had (three months before the nuptials) to determine if
Buckley could suitably support Kay
- the scene of Stanley facing his daughter's overbearing
caterers: ("An experienced caterer can make you ashamed of your
house in fifteen minutes")
- the segment of his nightmarish vision of what might
happen at a disastrous wedding ceremony (he imagined himself appearing
late, in tatters, and not able to walk down the springy and rubbery
aisle, as his daughter screamed)
- his midnight snack kitchen scene with his daughter
over a bottle of milk, when she told him, "Nothing ever fazes
you, does it?"
- Stanley's confusion and regret about losing his daughter:
("What's it going to be like to come home and not find her.
Not to hear her voice calling 'Hi Pops' as I come in. I suddenly
realized what I was doing. I was giving up Kay. Something inside
me was beginning to hurt")
- the tearjerking scene of Kay's post-wedding phone
call (on her way to her honeymoon) to lovingly say 'thank you' to
her father: ("And Pops, you've been just wonderful. I love you.
I love you very much. Bye bye")
- Stanley's memorable last line: ("Nothing's really
changed, has it? You know what they say: 'My son's my son until he
gets him a wife, but my daughter's my daughter all of her life.'
All of our life")
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Stanley's Voice-Over Narrated Flashback
Stanley's "Man-to-Man" Talk with Fiancee Buckley
The Wedding Caterers
Wedding Nightmare
Kay's Post-Wedding Thank You Phone Call to Her Father
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