I have moved your thread to the General Language Discussions forum as questions of this sort are of little interest to our general student/learner membership.
Please post them here yourself in future.
Alex Le Domas says to his future wife Grace about his brother Daniel view on his marriage:
Alex Le: You know, Daniel's right. We could just... leave.
Grace: Oh, sure, yeah. "Thanks for the presents. Go f*ck yourselves."
Alex Le: No. I'm serious, I'm serious, honey.
What "presents" is Grace referring to?
Does it refer to the collective windfall they've gotten from the family?
Source: Ready or Not (a 2019 American action horror black comedy film directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett)
I have moved your thread to the General Language Discussions forum as questions of this sort are of little interest to our general student/learner membership.
Please post them here yourself in future.
Without watching the film, it's impossible for us to know. We all know the general definition of the noun "present" but without the full context, we don't know what presents they're referring to. Are you aware that Grace's line is sarcastic?
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.
It sounds like future wedding presents to me, but, as others have said, we're short on context. Can you link to the scene?