![]() Lauren (Miller) is a business ace who has just lost her job and her boyfriend, while Katie (Graynor) is an aimless young woman working a series of jobs that don't pay enough for her to pay the bills on her late grandmother's gorgeous flat. When his two best pals have housing problems, gay New York comic Jesse (Long) suggests they move in together. This will be the 27-year-old actress’ first child, while Webber, 33, has a young son, Issac Love, with actress Frankie Shaw.Ĭontinue reading: With A Baby On The Way, Teresa Palmer Weds Mark Webber In Beachfront Ceremony The now married couple announced their engagement back in August, just two weeks before dropping the baby news. They reportedly held hands the entire time. In the ultimate moment of cuteness, the pair exchanged vows under a an altar decorated with greenery and white and pink flowers. The bride was wearing an appropriately airy white lace dress with plenty of room for her baby bump. It sounds like the perfect intimate wedding, with the pair saying “I do” at a private house in Punta Mita, overlooking the ocean. The couple got married ahead of the birth of their baby. According to Us Weekly, who were first to break the happy news, the couple got hitched in Mexico on Saturday, December 21, ahead of the birth of their first child. And Pruitt Taylor Vince is on hand as his usual bug-eyed, shifty nerd who knows more than anyone else.Ĭongratulations to Warm Bodies actress Teresa Palmer, who just tied the knot with longtime boyfriend Mark Webber. His family seem eerily oblivious, but Ron Perlman adds some deadpan humour as a detective following Elliot's trail. In another actor's hands, Elliot might have come across as an idiot who deserves whatever's coming, but Webber has a vulnerability that makes us care what happens, even as he does one stupid thing after another. Instead, there's nothing to do but sit back and watch. So there's no way to join in with Elliot's disorienting dilemma. Without a hint of subtlety in the script, we never have any questions about what is happening, what the moral implications are and where the story's going next. Then he realises that he's not the only contestant. But if he wins, his worries will be over. It starts with killing a fly, but soon escalates to making a child cry, starting a fire in a church and desecrating a dead body. So when a stranger phones to offer him a place in a cash-bonanza game, he doesn't mind that the 13 tasks are increasingly deranged. Not only is he planning his wedding with his pregnant fiancee Shelby (Rutina Wesley), but he also helps support his retirement-age dad (Tom Bower) and mentally disabled brother (Graye). The film opens as nice guy Elliot (Mark Webber) is sacked from his New Orleans job at exactly the wrong time. Effortlessly charming even when she's being a jerk, she develops a wonderful improv-like chemistry with both Moretz and Rockwell, while the bit players add plenty of texture to each episodic sequence.Ĭontinue reading: Say When Review There isn't a single surprise along the way, but Knightley's breezy performance is more than enough to carry the audience with her on this odyssey. And these predictable plot turns feed into the standard rom-com structure of the screenplay, right up to climactic scenes at both an airport and the prom. Yes, it's obvious from the moment Megan and Craig start bickering where this is headed. But Annika's single dad Craig (Sam Rockwell) begins to challenge Megan to realise that perhaps there are benefits to growing up. So Megan invents a story about attending a self-help conference and lays low, hanging out with her new teen gang like it's the good old days. As they bond, Annika invites Megan to stay at her house. At a convenience shop, a group of teens asks her to buy some alcohol, and suddenly she has a new best friend in Annika (Chloe Grace Moretz). So when her longtime boyfriend Anthony (Mark Webber) proposes, just as she discovers that her dad (Jeff Garlin) has cheated on her mom, Megan makes a run for it. It's set in Seattle, where Megan (Knightley) is in her late-20s, horrified to see her close circle of friends settling down into predictable lives involving marriage and children.
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