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  1. Rachel Getting Married is a 2008 American drama film directed by Jonathan Demme, and starring Anne Hathaway, Rosemarie DeWitt, Bill Irwin, and Debra Winger.The film premiered at the 65th Venice International Film Festival on September 3, 2008, opened in Canada's Toronto International Film Festival on September 6 and released in the U.S. to select theaters on October 3.

  2. Oct 31, 2008 · Rachel Getting Married: Directed by Jonathan Demme. With Sebastian Stan, Roslyn Ruff, Anne Hathaway, Bill Irwin. A young woman who has been in and out of rehab for the past ten years returns home for the weekend for her sister's wedding.

    • (51K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Jonathan Demme
    • 2008-10-31
  3. When KYM (Anne Hathaway) returns to the Buchman family home for the wedding of her sister RACHEL (Rosemarie Dewitt), she brings a long history of personal cr...

    • 2 min
    • 691.8K
    • Sony Pictures Classics
  4. When an estranged daughter (Anne Hathaway) returns home for her sister Rachel's wedding, her arrival throws a wrench into the family's precarious social dyna...

  5. Rachel Getting Married. As an affluent New England family prepares for one daughter's wedding, another named Kym (Anne Hathaway) -- just out of her latest stint in rehab -- whirls into town ...

    • (204)
    • Jonathan Demme
    • R
    • Anne Hathaway
    • Rachel Getting Married movie1
    • Rachel Getting Married movie2
    • Rachel Getting Married movie3
    • Rachel Getting Married movie4
    • Rachel Getting Married movie5
  6. The next morning, the day of the wedding, Kym is awoken by police. After passing a sobriety test, she gets a ride home. She makes her way to Rachel's room, as Rachel prepares for the wedding. Seeing Kym's bruised face from a fight she had with their mother, the anger of the previous night vanishes, and Rachel tenderly bathes and dresses her sister.

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  8. Oct 8, 2008 · She knows everyone, watches everything, is pleased or concerned, stands quietly behind her husband, loves his daughters, smooths the waves. To give her a foregrounded role would have been a mistake. But you will not forget her. One of the reasons Smith works so well as an unobtrusive soothing element is typecasting.