Father of the Bride (1950 film)

1950 film by Vincente Minnelli

Father of the Bride is a 1950 film about father of a young woman who deals with the organizational trouble of arranging the wedding.

Directed by Vincente Minnelli. Written by Frances Goodrich, based on the 1949 novel by Edward Streeter.
The Bride gets the THRILLS! Father gets the BILLS!  (taglines)

Stanley T. Banks edit

  • 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 marriages were a simple affair. Boy meets girl. Fall in love. They get married. Have babies. Eventually the babies grow up and meet other babies. They fall in love. Get married. Have babies. 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.
  • Right then I knew we'd lost her. She'll always love us of course, but not in the old way. From now on her love will be handed out like a farmer's wife tossing scraps to the family rooster.

Dialogue edit

Ben Banks: Can't be June. I've got my final. Why not May?
Ellie Banks: May's too early.
Tommy Banks: July's out. I'm going to camp.
Kay Banks: This isn't a kids party. It's my wedding and my friends.
Stanley T. Banks: Ellie, what did you mean by?
Kay Banks: No one has to raise a finger. When the time comes, I'll do everything. And I mean everything.
Ellie Banks: I can imagine that.
Ben Banks: I'm not going.
Kay Banks: Listen! I don't care if you come or not!

Taglines edit

  • The Bride gets the THRILLS! Father gets the BILLS!

Cast edit

The Banks Family edit

  • Stanley
  • Ellie (wife)
  • Kay (daughter)
  • Buckley Dunstan (son-in-law)
  • Tommy (son)
  • Ben (son)

External links edit

 
Wikipedia