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A Very Sordid Wedding
Tired of the religious zealotry and anti-gay bigotry in their Texas town, sisters Latrell, LaVonda, and Aunt Sissy decide to protest an 'Anti-Equality Rally' which aims to forbid any same sex weddings in their county. The colorful characters from the previous 'Sordid Lives' decide a wedding is exactly what this small-minded town needs.
13 April 1964, Westmount, Québec, Canada
10 July 1965, San Francisco, California, USA
8 December 1960, McAllen, Texas, USA
13 November 1955, New York City, New York, USA
16 March 1949, Salem, Massachusetts, USA
27 March 1985, Los Angeles, California, USA
20 September 1935, Borger, Texas, USA
March 15, 2017
Delivers much of the same brand of raucous, gay-themed humor that propelled its predecessor to surprising success.July 05, 2017
You'll get a gay rights sermon with your booze and cigarettes and Southern charm the way the good lord intended.August 31, 2017
As broad as the side of a barn but much more amusing.March 10, 2017
If you liked the original, the overdue sequel to Sordid Lives will both delight you and warm your ever-lovin' heart.March 07, 2017
There's something touching about Shores' hope that a town like Winters can change colors like the streaks of eye shadow that cake his characters' faces, but his impulse toward Southern-fried cartoonishness cheapens and undermines it.September 07, 2017
The film is undeniably energetic, with a lot of good lines written by Shores, but it descends into obvious preachiness, and from this view, the unrelenting wackiness becomes overwhelming.