The Bachelor (1999 film)
The Bachelor | |
---|---|
Directed by | Gary Sinyor |
Screenplay by | Steve Cohen |
Based on | Seven Chances by Roi Cooper Megrue Seven Chances (screenplay) by Jean C. Havez |
Produced by | Jeffrey T. Barabe Bing Howenstein Lloyd Segan |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Simon Archer |
Edited by | Robert M. Reitano Florence Vinger |
Music by | David A. Hughes John Murphy |
Production company | George Street Pictures |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release date |
|
Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $21 million[1] |
Box office | $36.9 million |
The Bachelor is a 1999 American romantic comedy-drama fantasy film directed by Gary Sinyor and written by Steve Cohen. It is a remake of the 1925 film Seven Chances and stars Chris O'Donnell and Renée Zellweger. The film received negative reviews from critics and grossed $36.9 million against its $21 million budget. This film also marks Mariah Carey's acting debut.
Plot[]
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (June 2021) |
A bachelor, after spoiling his proposal to his girlfriend of three years, discovers that his grandfather has died and left him the family business under the conditions that he be married by 6:05 p.m. on his 30th birthday (which, is the next day), that he not be apart from his bride for more than a week at a time over the next 10 years of their marriage, and that they must attempt to produce a child sometime during the first five years of their marriage, leading to the bachelor, his friends, and a priest to scramble over the next few hours in search of a bride.
If Jimmy fails, business competitor Oden Sports will buy the company. Meanwhile, Anne has second thoughts and returns to her apartment, which she shares with her sister Natalie (Marley Shelton). Natalie talks Anne into going home to go visit their parents for the night.
A desperate Jimmie opens a shoebox full of photos of old girlfriends, and begins to track them down. First he sees Stacey (Rebecca Cross), an oil futures trader, who turns out to be engaged. Second is Zoe (Stacy Edwards), a window dresser. Jimmie goes to see her, but just after, he runs off after a woman who he thinks is Anne. He returns to find Zoe has set a mannequin on fire.
He strikes out with an opera singer (Mariah Carey) and a cop (Jennifer Esposito). Soon his list is depleted, but his last choice accepts— Buckley (Brooke Shields), who detests Jimmie but wants his money to prop up her family's fortune. As the priest tries to conduct the ceremony, she gradually learns the other conditions of the will. Horrified, she drives away.
Anne misses Jimmie and heads back to the city. Trying to locate him, she calls Marco to arrange dinner with Jimmie.
As everyone scrambles to help Jimmie save the family business, Jimmie realizes the "effect" of marriage, as the priest reveals how he took on the priesthood after his wife died, and that he was proud to be married and produce a family in the process.
Realizing that he loves Anne and is ready to 'take the plunge', Jimmie, after being up all night, rests in the church where Marco had promised to deliver a bride. He awakens to find hundreds of women dressed as brides waiting for him. After trying to settle the women down, Marco lies and says it was all a prank. Marco reveals that Anne is on her way back, so Jimmie flees to the train station, ordering a cake on the way. He makes it there after escaping the brides. He finds Anne in the train, but she has discovered a newspaper with its front page asking, "Would you marry this man for $100 million?" with Jimmie's picture beside. She is upset, but he professes his love for her and they reconcile.
Natalie finds a discarded wedding dress in the station, and Anne puts it on in the bathroom. She opens the door to see hundreds of brides run past, chasing Jimmie. Jimmie flees. He eventually climbs up a flight on a fire escape and shouts for Anne, as the brides gather below. The priest begins to conduct the ceremony over a loudspeaker from inside a police car, causing many 'brides' to attack the car. Anne, in the crowd, makes her way through and up to Jimmie. Anne convinces the other women to be happy and let it be her day.
The priest finishes the ceremony by pronouncing them husband and wife, to cheers from all, and Jimmie and Anne kiss. They made it just in time before the deadline of 6:05 p.m. to inherit a 100 million dollars. She then tosses her bouquet into the teeming crowd below.
Cast[]
- Chris O'Donnell - Jimmie Shannon
- Renée Zellweger - Anne Arden
- Artie Lange - Marco
- Mariah Carey - Ilana
- Edward Asner - Sid Gluckman
- Hal Holbrook - Roy O'Dell
- James Cromwell - The Priest
- Marley Shelton - Natalie Arden
- Peter Ustinov - Grandad James Shannon
- Katharine Towne - Monique
- Rebecca Cross - Stacey
- Stacy Edwards - Zoe
- Sarah Silverman - Carolyn
- Jennifer Esposito - Daphne
- Brooke Shields - Buckley Hale-Windsor
- Anastasia Horne - Peppy Boor
- Pat Finn - Bolt
Release[]
Critical reception[]
The Bachelor holds a 9% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 70 reviews with the consensus: "Clichéd, witless and irritating, The Bachelor proves that Chris O'Donnell is no Buster Keaton."[2] Stephen Holden on The New York Times raves a silent-film comedy, although its satire is too broad to carry much of a sting. and Gene Shalit on the Today Show raves furiovisly fast and fiendishly funny and it's magnificent and extraordinary
Box office[]
The film opened at number 3 at the North American box office behind The Bone Collector and House on Haunted Hill making $7.5 million USD in its opening weekend.[3] The Bachelor ultimately grossed $37 million worldwide making it a modest box success.
References[]
- ^ "The Bachelor (1999) - Financial Information".
- ^ "The Bachelor (1999)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
- ^ "Bone Collector Makes Winning Debut". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
External links[]
- 1999 films
- English-language films
- 1999 comedy films
- 1999 romantic comedy films
- American fantasy films
- American films
- American film remakes
- American romantic comedy films
- American comedy-drama films
- 1990s English-language films
- Films about weddings in the United States
- Films directed by Gary Sinyor
- Films scored by John Murphy (composer)
- Films set in San Francisco
- Films set in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Films shot in New Mexico
- New Line Cinema films
- Sound film remakes of silent films