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  1. American Wedding

    American Wedding

    R2003 · Comedy · 1h 37m

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  1. Aug 1, 2003 · American Wedding: Directed by Jesse Dylan. With Jason Biggs, Seann William Scott, Alyson Hannigan, Eddie Kaye Thomas. It's the wedding of Jim and Michelle and the gathering of their families and friends, including Jim's old friends from high school and Michelle's little sister.

    • (214K)
    • Comedy
    • Jesse Dylan
    • 2003-08-01
  2. American Wedding (known as American Pie 3: The Wedding or American Pie: The Wedding, in some countries) is a 2003 American sex comedy film written by Adam Herz and directed by Jesse Dylan. It is the sequel to American Pie (1999) and American Pie 2 (2001), and the third of the American Pie franchise .

    • $55 million
  3. Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification. Jason Biggs. ... Jim Levenstein. Seann William Scott. ... Steve Stifler. Alyson Hannigan.

  4. Aug 1, 2003 · Steve Stifler. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Even though Jim (Jason Biggs) and Michelle (Alyson Hannigan) have been dating for several years, she's still surprised when he proposes to her in their ...

    • (11.2K)
    • Jesse Dylan
    • R
    • Jason Biggs
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  6. Summaries. It's the wedding of Jim and Michelle and the gathering of their families and friends, including Jim's old friends from high school and Michelle's little sister. Jim Levenstein has finally found the courage to ask his girlfriend, Michelle Flaherty to marry him. She agrees to get married, but the problems don't stop there for Jim.

  7. American Wedding. The group of best friends from their days back at East Great Falls High reunite for the next great sexual adventure in their lives... the wedding of Jim and Michelle. Rentals include 30 days to start watching this video and 48 hours to finish once started. The group of best friends from their days back at East Great Falls High ...

  8. "American Wedding," directed by Jesse Dylan, written by Adam Herz, is proof of the hypothesis that no genre is beyond redemption.There is no joke too low for the movie to stoop to, no melodrama too broad, no human weakness too pitiful to satirize, and yet, because the filmmakers and the actors like these characters and wish them well and want them to somehow live happily ever after, all is ...

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