The basic premise is that David is marrying Mia, and pretty much everything goes wrong. Nothing fresh there. In this particular case, the chaos surrounds the bride’s father and his political ambitions for his daughter, a sheep, a collection of drugs, and the, er, ‘behaviour’ of the best men in question. Given that the romance at the heart of the film is a whirlwind one, the bride has never really met the best men before. An hour into the movie, she clearly wishes that had stayed unchanged.  But that doesn’t mean that there aren’t things to like here. The movie is from Stephan Elliott, whose biggest comedy success to date is Priscilla, Queen Of The Desert. Elliott is skilled at mining laughs from familiar situations here, and A Few Best Men scores surprisingly well on the chuckle count. What’s more, it also has a trump card of sorts in the shape of Olivia Newton-John (she’s not singing, but she does knock a drink or two back). It’s rare to see her on the big screen, and she’s clearly having a lot of fun here. There’s nothing radical in A Few Best Man, and no attempt to shake up, subvert or add much to a genre that you could kindly describe as saturated. So that basically leaves one question: is A Few Best Men worth 90 minutes of your time? Provided you don’t have a natural aversion to films of this ilk, it just about is. It takes a while to get into any kind of flow, and it feels really quite uneven at times. But it’s fun, quite funny, and a decent, solid entry to the genre. It’s good to see Stephan Elliott back directing a comedy again, too. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.