Ginny and Greg are in love, and despite the awkward amount of unexplained flowers and chocolates oddly filling her flat, Greg proposes as Ginny is heading off for the day to see her parents – or so she says. Greg has found the address and manages to arrive first to surprise her and ask her father for her hand. The problem is, these are not, in fact, Ginny’s parents. The “parents,” Sheila and Philip, welcome Greg into their house, each thinking he is someone else. The unraveling of this hilarious mess is this smart, perfectly-crafted comedy of mistaken identities and motives.
Ginny and Greg are in love, and despite the awkward amount of unexplained flowers and chocolates oddly filling her flat, Greg proposes as Ginny is heading off for the day to see her parents – or so she says. Greg has found the address and manages to arrive first to surprise her and ask her father for her hand. The problem is, these are not, in fact, Ginny’s parents. The “parents,” Sheila and Philip, welcome Greg into their house, each thinking he is someone else. The unraveling of this hilarious mess is this smart, perfectly-crafted comedy of mistaken identities and motives.
Ginny and Greg are in love, and despite the awkward amount of unexplained flowers and chocolates oddly filling her flat, Greg proposes as Ginny is heading off for the day to see her parents – or so she says. Greg has found the address and manages to arrive first to surprise her and ask her father for her hand. The problem is, these are not, in fact, Ginny’s parents. The “parents,” Sheila and Philip, welcome Greg into their house, each thinking he is someone else. The unraveling of this hilarious mess is this smart, perfectly-crafted comedy of mistaken identities and motives.