The Bucket List | |
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Directed by | Rob Reiner |
Produced by |
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Written by | Justin Zackham |
Starring | |
Music by | Marc Shaiman |
Cinematography | John Schwartzman |
Edited by | Robert Leighton |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date |
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97 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $45 million[1] |
Box office | $175.4 million[1] |
2002 - 'No Such Thing' John Mayer's debut single 'No Such Thing' was released in April 2002 as his. About Say 'Say' is a song by John Mayer written for the Rob Reiner film The Bucket List in 2007. It was released as a single on November 20 and is the first commercial single in Mayer's career that was not originally released on one of his albums but added to the special edition re-release of his album Continuum. This is the first song John Mayer wrote on commission for a specific project. He wrote it for the film The Bucket List starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman. The film is a story of two terminally ill men determined to complete a wish list of things to do before they die. The video for 'Say' shows a number of scenes from the film. You are watching John Mayer: Say (music video from 'The Bucket List') on Godtube.com the largest video sharing platform offering online Christian videos with faith-based, family friendly content.
The Bucket List is a 2007 Americanbuddycomedy-dramafilm directed and produced by Rob Reiner, written by Justin Zackham, and starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman.[2] The main plot follows two terminally ill men on their road trip with a wish list of things to do before they 'kick the bucket'.
The film premiered on December 15, 2007 in Hollywood and opened in limited release in the United States on December 25, 2007, by Warner Bros. The film then had a wide release on January 11, 2008. Despite receiving mixed reviews from critics, the film was chosen by National Board of Review as one of the top ten films of 2007 and was a box office success, grossing $175 million worldwide.
Plot[edit]
Two elderly men, blue-collar mechanic Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman) and billionaire health care magnate Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson) meet for the first time in a hospital that Cole just bought after both have been diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. Cole wants a private room, but his own public statements, which state that in his hospitals, all rooms are double-occupancy for cost-efficiency, get in the way.
Carter is a gifted amateur historian and family man who wanted to become a history professor in his youth but never rose above his status as a mechanic. Cole is a four-time divorced health care tycoon and cultured loner who enjoys tormenting his personal valet/servant, Thomas (Sean Hayes) —who later reveals his name is actually Matthew. Cole enjoys drinking kopi luwak, one of the most expensive coffees in the world.
During their time on the ward, Carter and Cole manage to find common ground. For fun, Carter earlier had begun writing a 'bucket list,' a list of activities to do before he 'kicks the bucket.' After hearing he has less than a year to live, Carter dejectedly discards his list. Cole finds it the next morning and urges Carter to do everything on the list while also offering to finance the travel expenses for both of them. Carter agrees and, despite the protests of his wife, Virginia (Beverly Todd), the two patients begin their globetrotting last vacation. They go skydiving, drive Shelby Mustangs around Auto Club Speedway, fly over the North Pole, eat dinner at Chevre d'or in France, visit and praise the Taj Mahal, ride motorcycles on the Great Wall of China, attend a lion safari in Tanzania, and visit Mount Everest in Nepal.
Atop the Great Pyramid while looking out over the neighboring pyramids of Khafre and Menkaure, they confide mutually about faith and family. Carter reveals that he has long been feeling less in love with his wife. Cole discloses that he is deeply hurt by his estrangement from his only daughter (Jennifer DeFrancisco), who disowned him after he drove away her abusive husband. Later, while in Hong Kong, Cole hires a prostitute to approach Carter, who has never been with any woman but his wife. Carter declines and realizes Cole was behind the woman's attention, whereupon he insists they stop the bucket project and go home.
During the return journey, Carter tries to reunite Cole with Cole's estranged daughter. Considering this a breach of trust, Cole angrily storms off. Carter returns home to his own family for a festive holiday dinner while Cole, feeling alone though amid the company of attractive escorts, breaks down weeping in his luxury high-rise suite. Carter's family reunion turns out to be short-lived: while readying for marital romance, Carter collapses and is rushed to the hospital. The cancer has spread to his brain.
Cole, who is now in a remarkable remission, visits him and they share a few moments. Carter, always a Jeopardy! fan knowledgeable about trivia, reveals how Cole's special Sumatra-grown kopi luwak coffee is fed to and defecated by a jungle cat before being harvested. Cole was unaware that the unique aroma of the gastric juices present after this defecation give the coffee variety its distinctive flavor. Carter then crosses off 'laugh till I cry' from his bucket list and implores Cole to finish the list without him. Carter undergoes surgery but dies on the operating table.
As news of Carter's death is given to his wife and family, Cole attempts to reconcile with his own daughter. She accepts him back into her life and introduces him to the granddaughter (Taylor Ann Thompson) he never knew he had. After greeting the little girl with a kiss on the cheek, Edward thoughtfully crosses 'kiss the most beautiful girl in the world' off his bucket list. Soon after, Cole delivers a eulogy at Carter's funeral, during which he explains that the last three months of Carter's life were, thanks to Carter, the best three months of Cole's own life. Cole crosses 'help a complete stranger for the good' off the list.
An epilogue reveals that Cole lived to age 81, and his ashes were then taken to a peak in the Himalayas by his assistant, Matthew. As Matthew places a Chock full o'Nuts coffee can alongside another can, he crosses off the last item on the bucket list ('witness something truly majestic') and tucks the completed list between the cans. Carter's voiceover narration reveals that the two cans contain their ashes and that Cole would have loved this, because he was 'buried on the mountain —and that was against the law'.
Cast[edit]
- Jack Nicholson as Edward Cole
- Morgan Freeman as Carter Chambers
- Sean Hayes as Thomas/Matthew
- Beverly Todd as Virginia Chambers
- Rob Morrow as Dr. Hollins
- Alfonso Freeman as Roger Chambers
- Rowena King as Angelica
- Jennifer DeFrancisco as Emily Cole
- Serena Reeder as Rachel
- Annton Berry Jr as Kai
- Verda Bridges as Chandra
- Destiny Brownridge as Maya
- Brian Copeland as Lee
- Ian Anthony Dale as instructor
- Noel Guglielmi as mechanic
- Jonathan Hernandez as Manny
- Andrea J. Johnson as Elizabeth
- Jordan Lund as tattoo artist
- Jonathan Mangum as Richard
- Christopher Stapleton as Kyle
- Alex Trebek as himself
- Taylor Ann Thompson as Edward's granddaughter
- Karen Maruyama as Nurse Shing
Reception[edit]
The Bucket List received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 41%, based on 174 reviews, with an average rating of 5.15/10. The site's critical consensus reads, 'Not even the earnest performances of the two leads can rescue The Bucket List from its schmaltzy script'.[3]Metacritic gave the film a score of 42 out of 100, based on 34 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[4] Snehil Sharma of Humari Baat MSME gave 4 stars for the film[5].
Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert, who was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2002 and whose lower jaw was removed in 2006, criticized the film's portrayal of cancer sufferers, writing in his one-star review that The Bucket List '...thinks dying of cancer is a laff riot followed by a dime-store epiphany.'[6]
Box office[edit]
The film opened in wide release in the United States and Canada on January 11, 2008 and grossed $19,392,416 from 3,200 screens at 2,911 theaters, averaging $6,662 per theater ($6,060 per screen) and ranking #1 at the box office.[7] The film closed on June 5, 2008, never having a weekend-to-weekend decline of more than 40%, and ended up with a final gross of $93,466,502 in the United States and Canada and another $81,906,000 overseas, for a total gross of $175,372,502 worldwide, easily recouping the film's considerable $45 million budget and turning a sizable profit for Warner Bros..[1]
Accolades[edit]
Named one of the Top Ten Films of the Year by the National Board of Review.[citation needed]
Soundtrack[edit]
A score album from Varèse Sarabande was released on January 15, 2008, featuring composer Marc Shaiman's original score for the film as well as a selection of newly recorded themes from Shaiman's previous scoring projects, including City Slickers, Simon Birch, The Addams Family, Mother, North, Sleepless in Seattle, South Park: Bigger Longer & Uncut, Mr. Saturday Night, and Stuart Saves His Family. It also features a rearranged version of the James Bond theme 'Goldfinger' (titled 'Printmaster'), with Shaiman's own voice and lyrics in which he spoofs the industry's habit of tracking music in scenes where they don't belong.
John Mayer Say The Bucket Lists
The full list of 23 tracks is as follows:
- Hospital Hallway (from the movie)
- Like Smoke through a Keyhole (from the movie)
- Best in L.A. (from the movie)
- Really Bad News (from the movie)
- Milord – Édith Piaf (from the movie)
- Hotel Source (from the movie)
- Did You Hear It? (from the movie)
- Flying Home (from the movie)
- Homecomings (from the movie)
- Life and Death (from the movie)
- The Mountain (from the movie)
- End Credits (from the movie)
- Theme from The American President ('A Seed of Grain')
- Theme from City Slickers
- Theme from Simon Birch
- Theme from The Addams Family
- Theme from Mother
- Theme from North
- Sleepless in Seattle / A Wink and a Smile'
- South Park: Bigger Longer & Uncut/'Blame Canada'
- Theme from Mr. Saturday Night
- 'Printmaster' (After John Barry's 'Goldfinger')
- Theme from Stuart Saves His Family ('What Makes a Family')
The theme song, John Mayer's 'Say,' is not included on the Bucket List soundtrack, but included on the re-release of Mayer's third album Continuum.
Home media[edit]
The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray June 10, 2008.
See also[edit]
- Hawks, a 1988 film with a similar plot
- Knockin' on Heaven's Door, a 1997 film with a similar plot
- John Goddard, early producer of a bucket list.
- Bucket List (2018 film), Indian Marathi languagecomedy-drama
Footnote[edit]
- ^ The 'Castle Rock Entertainment' logo does not appear in this film's opening.
References[edit]
John Mayer Say The Bucket List Crossword
- ^ abc'The Bucket List (2007)'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-03-18.
- ^'The Bucket List'. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
- ^'The Bucket List – Rotten Tomatoes'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
- ^'Bucket List, The (2007): Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved 2008-01-19.
- ^'Bucket List – A Marathi Film made with Distinction | Humari Baat'. 2018-05-25. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
- ^'The Bucket List'. Chicago Sun-Times.
- ^'The Bucket List (2007) – Weekend Box Office Results'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-01-28.
External links[edit]
John Mayer Say Lyrics Meaning
- The Bucket List on IMDb
- The Bucket List at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Bucket List at Metacritic
- The Bucket List at Box Office Mojo
- The Bucket List at AllMovie