THAT at the very end there. "things that could've been brought to my attention YESTERDAY". Sandler has that ability to turn mucky muck muck scenes on a dime with a simple bout of manic yelling. Robbie Hart is a sad guy, but we don't want to see that. We want the fire that lets us know, "hey- there is a rest of a movie still going on." And that slow build to the word 'Yesterday' lets the audience know not to worry, and that this Robbie Hart in an altered state can be funny. They try the joke later in a more wordier manner while making it less poignant and more annoying: "well I have a microphone, and you don't, SO YOU WILL LISTEN TO EVERY WORD I HAVE TO SAY". This just comes off as a joke painting the Robbie as selfish, while YESTERDAY casts Robbie in a scorned lover light.
Adam Sandler's career is based around playing juvenile, ill-mannered, egotistical demeanors who mostly thrash about vulgarly displaying, not controlling, the characteristics. When he's not doing that he chokes wry sentiment from emotional situations (Big Daddy, 50 First Dates, Click). The Wedding Singer falls into the latter, but coming off of the career establishing of Billy Madison, Happy Gilmore, and SNL, we were still tossed a couple of uninhibited goofing. The line 'things that could've been brought to my attention YESTERDAY' establishes the emotion without sacrificing the fact that Adam Sandler is here to amuse us. With that line in that scene, his career peaked. Sandler has been a mess of money-making PG-13 affairs and ho-hum attempts of crediblity ever since. I don't know whether it is a sad thing to encapsulate someone's career into one line or not, especially for an actor as successful as Sandler. It probably isn't. What I do know is that I am glad Adam Sandler delivered us a line that is a lighthouse of a sentence in a rough seas of a career.
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