How’s this for getting out of being a maid of honor: “I’m a secret agent.”
That doesn’t come up right away in “Bride Hard” but it does give Rebel Wilson an out and a chance to ply her action skills in a middling comedy with “Pitch Perfect” co-star Anna Camp.

Bridal party: From left, Anna Chlumsky, Anna Camp, Gigi Zumbado, Rebel Wilson and Da'Vine Joy Randolph in "Bride Hard."Â
Camp plays the bride; Wilson is the one originally slated to be best bestie. When work pulls her away, an obsessive “other” friend (nicely played by Anna Chlumsky) steps in and, um, takes over.
She has the weekend planned down to the caprese skewers and doesn’t really want the O.G. maid of honor to interfere. Unfortunately, there’s a crime about to go down at the wedding site and Wilson’s Sam has to make like “Ballerina” and seek and destroy.
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While scouting the site (a gorgeous Georgia plantation, complete with distillery) she encounters the problem and then it’s just a matter of MacGyvering her circumstances.
Wilson gets a chance to unearth laughs but there’s a lot that director Simon West might have done to maximize his opportunity. A lot of great comedians (and Oscar winner Da’Vine Joy Randolph) are frequently left standing at attention while others shoot, slide and transport gold bars.
Stephen Dorff shows up as the baddie (of course) and gets the Coyote end of the fight with Wilson’s Road Runner. Justin Hartley is here, too, (presumably as a match for Wilson) but he’s not mined for much more than abs.
The fun comes when Chlumsky thinks she’s losing her hold. Every step of the way, she nervously sizes up the situation and makes adjustments. Wilson is more laid back, avoiding obvious laughs to lean into those action moves.

Anna Camp, center, is the bride in "Bride Hard." Rebel Wilson plays her maid of honor.Â
A slip and slide section could have been plumbed for more but that doesn’t seem to be what Wilson wants. Even some “Pitch Perfect” reminders could have pulled Camp into the game. Instead, she’s often left at the altar, wringing her bouquet.
Granted, Wilson has morphed as an actress since those early films. But now she doesn’t openly steal scenes, she waits until they come to her. Making her less controlled (and more controlling) could have given “Bride Hard” the edge something like “Bridesmaids” displayed.
Here, it’s “Betsy’s Wedding” with a few mercenaries thrown in.