Starring: Adam Sandler, Jennifer Aniston, Nicole Kidman, Bailee Madison, Nick Swardson
The lie was just the beginning—now comes the commitment, and the international pressure. Just Go with It 2: Wedding Season brings Danny Maccabee (Adam Sandler) and Katherine Murphy (Jennifer Aniston) back together, fifteen years into a mostly happy, yet pleasantly chaotic, marriage grounded in truth and shared imperfection.

But chaos erupts when their daughter, Maggie (Bailee Madison), announces she is engaged to the son of a rigid, ultra-conservative European billionaire, whose family, the Van Der Hoots, lives a life of stifling sophistication in the French countryside.
There is just one monumental problem: In an attempt to impress her impossibly perfect future in-laws, Maggie told them her parents are not a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon and his former (now-successful) office manager, but rather world-renowned, ultra-sophisticated humanitarian diplomats who specialize in global conflict resolution.
Forced to fly to a lavish chateau in the South of France for the pre-wedding festivities, Danny and Katherine must essentially “reverse” their original con. Instead of pretending to be an unhappy, divorcing couple, they must pretend to be the very epitome of sophistication, grace, and noble purpose—a task made immediately impossible when several familiar faces appear.

First, Devlin Adams (Nicole Kidman), the former college rival whose exotic charm once sparked the initial lie, arrives as the fiercely ambitious and demanding wedding planner, instantly recognizing the deceit. Second, Cousin Eddie (Nick Swardson) crashes the party, claiming to be the family’s “personal security detail” and immediately tries to smuggle a keg into the wine cellar.
As the lies stack up higher than the multi-tiered wedding cake, Danny struggles to maintain his persona as a diplomatic negotiator while inadvertently insulting world leaders, and Katherine desperately tries to look “elegant” while battling against Devlin’s sabotage. The entire charade threatens to unravel the wedding and expose the family’s gloriously messy reality.

But amidst the disastrous attempts at high culture, accidental slapstick, and stunning French locations, Danny and Katherine are forced into a series of situations that remind them why they fell for each other’s messy, imperfect, and genuinely funny selves in the first place.
Packed with signature Sandler humor, electric chemistry, and a surprising amount of French wine, Just Go with It 2: Wedding Season proves that while the truth might set you free, the lies are definitely way more fun.