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  • Death Do Us Part (2014): A Wedding So Bad It Should’ve Stayed Uninvited

Death Do Us Part (2014): A Wedding So Bad It Should’ve Stayed Uninvited

Posted on October 23, 2025 By admin No Comments on Death Do Us Part (2014): A Wedding So Bad It Should’ve Stayed Uninvited
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Til Death (and Terrible Writing) Do Us Part

If you’ve ever attended a wedding so disastrously awkward that you wished an axe murderer would crash it just to liven things up, Death Do Us Part is the movie for you. Unfortunately, even the killer can’t save this one.

Directed by Nicholas Humphries and written by a trio of people who apparently hate both matrimony and coherence—Julia Benson, Ryan Copple, and Peter Benson—this 2014 Canadian horror flick tries to serve up a mix of Friday the 13th, The Descent, and Bride Wars. What we get instead is a wedding-themed slasher that’s all bouquet toss and no bite.

It’s the kind of film that takes “happily ever after” and says, “What if… nobody’s happy and nothing makes sense?”


The Setup: Six Idiots and a Cabin

The movie opens with a disheveled woman in a wedding dress stumbling down a highway—always a promising start. She’s picked up by a park ranger and, in classic horror fashion, begins recounting how everything went horribly wrong. Cue the flashback to the previous day, where we meet the doomed bridal party heading to a cabin in the woods for what can only be described as a “red flag retreat.”

Kennedy (Julia Benson) is our bride-to-be, a woman so fragile she makes porcelain dolls look emotionally stable. She’s marrying Ryan (Peter Benson), a man whose face screams “I’m cheating on you,” because he is. With her half-sister.

The rest of the party includes:

  • Hannah, the aforementioned half-sister who apparently thinks adultery is a love language.

  • Emily, Kennedy’s best friend, who has the kind of intense devotion that should’ve been checked by a therapist.

  • Derrick, Ryan’s sleazy cousin who’s trying to blackmail his way out of drug debt.

  • Chet, the comic relief, whose jokes are about as funny as tetanus.

Rounding out the ensemble is Bo, the creepy caretaker who looks like he was born holding an axe, and who’s suspected of murdering his wife—because, sure, why not add that to the pile?

Naturally, they go to a remote cabin where there’s no cell service, because apparently no one in horror movies has heard of Airbnb.


The Murder Mystery: Everyone Hates Everyone

From the get-go, it’s clear that no one in this movie actually likes anyone else. Every conversation sounds like it was written during a group therapy session gone wrong. Kennedy’s mental health is unraveling faster than the script, Ryan’s infidelity is about as well-hidden as a clown at a funeral, and Derrick keeps muttering about money like he’s in a low-rent Scorsese flick.

Then the killing starts.

Derrick is the first to go—chopped up during a scavenger hunt, which is the only clever idea this film has. The others panic in a way that suggests none of them have seen a horror movie before, because instead of leaving, they decide to… split up.

Of course, Bo shows up wielding an axe, looking guilty as sin, and everyone immediately assumes he’s the killer. But this being a slasher film, you know that’s too obvious—unless you’re this movie, where “obvious” is a creative choice.

The group’s phones get tossed into the stove (because reasons), the car’s been sabotaged, and the generator dies. It’s almost as if the killer has a checklist labeled “standard horror clichés” and is dutifully working through them.


The Gore: Death by Boredom

For a film with “Death” in the title, there’s a shocking lack of memorable kills. Most of them happen offscreen or in confusingly edited flashes that suggest someone accidentally dropped the footage into a blender.

When Hannah gets knifed by a masked figure in a burlap sack, it’s neither scary nor suspenseful—it’s like watching someone try to cosplay as a potato sack. Chet’s death is equally unimpressive; by the time he’s killed, you’ve forgotten who he was. Even Bo, the one character who seemed halfway interesting, dies with all the dramatic impact of a broken lightbulb.

The gore that does appear feels oddly sanitized—like the filmmakers wanted to make a horror movie but were afraid of blood. You can almost hear them whispering, “Let’s keep it PG-13 so Grandma can watch.”


The Big Twist: Love Hurts, Logic Dies

After a long night of shrieking, stabbing, and aimless running, we finally reach the film’s supposed emotional climax. Kennedy confronts Ryan, who confesses—mid-fistfight—that he never loved her. She responds by stabbing him to death, which, to be fair, is the only relatable decision anyone makes in this movie.

Then she meets Emily, who claims to have survived. The two walk off together until Emily accidentally reveals she’s the real killer, having murdered everyone “to protect” Kennedy. Because nothing says friendship like homicide.

Kennedy strangles Emily, which seems like a tidy ending—until the film’s final twist, where we learn that Emily actually survived again, stole Kennedy’s wedding dress, and is now pretending to be her. The park ranger, thinking she’s the traumatized bride, tries to help—only for Emily to stab him in the neck with a pen before wandering into the woods, presumably to find another movie to ruin.


The Acting: Death by Overacting

Julia Benson, bless her, tries her hardest to give Kennedy emotional depth, but the script keeps throwing melodrama at her like confetti. Her “descent into madness” consists mostly of staring into space and hyperventilating.

Peter Benson (yes, her real-life husband) plays Ryan with all the charisma of a wet napkin. Every line he delivers sounds like it’s being read from a teleprompter just off-screen.

Emilie Ullerup as Emily fares slightly better, though her transformation from supportive friend to psycho killer comes out of nowhere. It’s as if she flipped a switch labeled “crazy mode” and went full Lifetime villain.

The supporting cast might as well have been cardboard cutouts labeled “Future Victim #2” and “Guy Who Says ‘What the Hell?’ Before Dying.”


The Horror: “We Have a Cabin—We’re Done, Right?”

There’s a saying in filmmaking: if you can’t make it scary, make it weird. Death Do Us Part tries both and achieves neither.

Every scare is telegraphed from a mile away, every shot of the woods feels like filler, and every time the score swells, you know nothing’s about to happen. The pacing is so sluggish that you start rooting for the killer just to move things along.

The film’s idea of suspense is cutting to a close-up of a flashlight beam while someone whispers, “Hello?” for the eighth time.

Even the editing seems to have given up halfway through. Scenes end abruptly, continuity disappears, and flashbacks are used so randomly that you start to suspect the editor was haunted too.


The Theme: Marriage Is Murder (Literally)

To its credit, the movie does have a theme: love is toxic, trust no one, and weddings are hell. Unfortunately, it delivers that message with all the subtlety of a bloodied bouquet to the face.

Instead of exploring the psychological tension between the characters, Death Do Us Part settles for surface-level melodrama and soap opera-level dialogue. The result isn’t so much terrifying as it is tiresome.

By the end, you’ll be less afraid of death and more afraid of ever being invited to a cabin wedding.


Final Thoughts: Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace

Death Do Us Part wants to be a gritty psychological slasher about love, betrayal, and madness. What it ends up being is a messy, low-energy soap opera interrupted by the occasional axe murder.

It’s a movie so committed to its clichés that it accidentally becomes a parody of itself. If you can make it through without checking your phone, you deserve a medal—or at least a strong drink.

Verdict: 1.5 out of 5 Bloody Bouquets.
If you’re looking for scares, look elsewhere. If you’re looking for an elaborate argument against marriage, this


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