The People We Hate At The Wedding ✰

The dynamic between Alice, Paul, and Eloise captures that specific brand of sibling jealousy where you love someone, but you also kind of want to see them trip over their own designer veil.

If you enjoy biting humor, cringe-comedy, and stories that lean into the "complicated" side of family love, then

It’s not that the characters are "bad" people; they’re just deeply insecure. Watching them navigate a high-society event while feeling like "the poor relations" is painfully funny. The People We Hate at the Wedding

You want more internal monologue and a sharper, more satirical edge.

Whether you’re gearing up for a movie night or looking for your next messy beach read, The People We Hate at the Wedding serves up exactly what the title promises: a dysfunctional, hilariously relatable disaster. The dynamic between Alice, Paul, and Eloise captures

Alice is stuck in a dead-end affair with her married boss; Paul is grappling with a stagnant relationship and a mountain of resentment; and Donna just wants her kids to stop bickering for five minutes. As they descend upon the British countryside, their personal lives implode in the most public ways possible. Why It Works

The story strips away the Pinterest-perfect veneer of weddings to show the logistical nightmares and emotional baggage underneath. Is It Worth the Watch (or Read)? You want more internal monologue and a sharper,

Ultimately, The People We Hate at the Wedding reminds us that families are messy, weddings are stressful, and sometimes the best way to get through it all is with a stiff drink and a little bit of honesty.