

In one phase of David (Clooney) and Georgia’s (Roberts) plan, they scheme to steal the couple’s rings before their binding ceremony. OK, there are a few other questions, like: why is Dever’s character repeatedly referred to as being a recent graduate of a four-year college and also set to “be a lawyer” at a “top firm” in Chicago before her Balinese about-face? Last I checked, law firms typically like their lawyers to go to law school, right? And how about Billie Lourd’s delightfully wobbly character, Dever’s character’s best friend and roommate who accompanies her on the post-grad island adventure- she certainly was not preparing for that white-shoe life. The main question that Ticket to Paradise would like us to ask while watching is “will they or won’t they?” Any chance that Clooney and Roberts’s David and Georgia, super good-looking exes united in sabotaging their daughter’s goo-goo-eyed happiness, might reconnect? I mean, we’re not new here, right? We all know.
#Now and later banana movie
This movie has so many bright white teeth and charmingly crinkly smiles, not to mention an incredible snippet of a good-natured Midwesterner absolutely losing her mind at some rough air. It’s basically the Avengers of rom-coms, what could go wrong? It’s the latest big-screen team-up of mega-stars George Clooney and Julia Roberts, which finds them as the bitterest of exes reunited in gorgeous Bali to stop a quickie marriage on behalf of their formerly high-achieving, high-strung daughter (played by Kaitlyn Dever, who should probably tattoo something along the lines of “yes, I was cast as the offspring of Clooney and Roberts, what have you ever done?” on her forearm).
