The Bachelor
Cast :Chris O'Donnell, Renée Zellweger
Director :Gary Sinyor
Studio :New Line Home Entertainment
Format :Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
Released Date :November 05, 1999
DVD Released Date :February 03, 2004
Language :English (Dubbed), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
Audience Rating :PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateJune 02, 2005
SummaryGary Sinyor's Best
Content
I liked the movie he made when he was first starting out, as a novice director, LEON THE PIG FARMER (don't let the awful title put you off). Of course LTPF is a very different kettle of fish than THE BACHELOR, but both movies exhibit a very vibrant borrowing from silent film and its subtleties. Sinyor also directed STIFF UPPER LIPS, the parody movie that gave stuffy Merchant-Ivory movies a good shaking up. PIG FARMER is out on DVD but only in the UK, in the meantime let's go to THE BACHELOR and see what's up. Well, it didn't do well at the box office, and studio moguls blamed Sinyor for its failure; what a blow for him, and he hasn't been given the chance to make another movie in the six years since then! (Although happily BOB THE BUTLER will be coming out hopefully by the end of the year, the movie that re-unites Sinyor with his BACHELOR star Brooke Shields.

Chris O'Donnell was doing very well, too, and then along came THE BACHELOR and a few other flops and before long he was regarded as box office poison. There was something about him that perhaps people didn't like, shame too, because he's definitely capable and he's also ready to step up and make a fool of himself for a laugh, something not every actor is willing to do. All these things combine in THE BACHELOR, a comedy romp set in San Francisco in which Chris plays the heir to a fortune of $120 million dollars, but there's a catch, he must marry within 24 hours, and the woman he loves, Renee Zellweger, isn't ready to say yes. So he proposes to a lot of women during the course of the movie. Naturally they all think he's crazy. This has its origin in the old silent classic 7 CHANCES, with Buster Keaton, but it provides a lot of opportunities for some talented actresses. Look out for wonderful Stacy Edwards, the deaf heroine of IN THE COMPANY OF MEN, in a lighter vein here! But the show belongs to Chris O'Donnell, and to a lesser extent Renee Zellweger in whose career this is only a blip. There she is winning Oscar after Oscar, and meanwhile Chris O'Donnell is making independent films after a long post-Bachelor hiatus. What a world!

Anyhow if you live in San Francisco, add another star to THE BACHELOR because you'll be proud we live in such a cool, beautiful city.

However you might deduct a star because the "extras" on this DVD are sub-par. You know there must be dozens of deleted bloopers from Mariah Carey's scenes alone, and yet for this presentation we get nothing!

Rating
DateMarch 24, 2005
SummaryFlawed, but still good
Content
I don't see why, when people see a film based on a really, really old Buster Keaton silent movie Seven Chances (1925), they instantly hate the up-to-date remake. It's never going to an Oscar winning movie, but lets face it, not many movies I watch (!) are.

OK, my first quibble is the horrible, horrible, region 1 cover, which you can see on the main page for this DVD. Chris O'Donnell looks positively ancient on it. The region 2 cover looks so much better. Is that a grey hair I see? Also Renee Zellweger obviously doesn't have the standing in Hollywood today to have someone do her hair for her. The poodle perm is so not a good look.

Look out for Brooke Shields, as an ex of Jimmy's, and also Mariah Carey, playing a very diva-ish (opera) singer. That must have been hard for her to play. She also plays an ex of Jimmy's.

The best scenes in the whole movie have to be towards the end, when Jimmy's $100 million, gimme a bride newspaper advert appears. Literally thousands of brides appear and chase him, and several of them are actually guys in drag. I would not have liked to see the dry cleaning bill after all those ladies (and gents) were finished with them!

The worst bits about this movie was the horrendous cliche about men being unable to commit, and giving up their 'bachelorhood' and no longer being able to sew their wild oats as the saying goes. Men are horribly portrayed in this, including an old geezer trying to give Jimmy his 15-year-old daughter as a bride. Women are also horrifically portrayed; when all the brides gathered, none of them are "classically" attractive. They were all nearly ugly, old, butch, fat, you name it, all of womankind's flaws were represented. And to make it even worse, some of them were MEN!!!

Not many people will agree with my review, so bring on the bad votes guys, cos I'm ready for it. So there. It's not an Oscar winning movie. But it's good to waste an hour or two. Now go vote for my Pearl Harbor review please.

Rating
DateFebruary 25, 2005
SummaryFormula Romantic Comedy with some twists
Content
Years before ABC started their own "Reality TV show" about a Bachelor having to choose from a group of marriage-minded women, there was this film, which I didn't see until just recently. Like most romantic comedies, it follows the same formula of boy meets girl, boy loses girl, and boy grovels to win back girl and they marry and live happily ever after. Pretty standard, unoriginal, and uninspired...and this film starts off that way and doesn't really take off until the bachelor (played by Chris O'Donnell) views a video will of his grandfather. Therein lies the premise...The bachelor is the last of his friends to get married, and his grandfather wants to ensure that his genetic line doesn't die off if his grandson doesn't do his manly duty: matrimony and parenthood. But the grandfather dies and makes a condition on the inheritence (shades of "Brewster's Millions"--which is thankfully mentioned in this film)...the bachelor will inherit $100 million only if he marries before he turns 30 years old to the exact minute of his birth. And, the marriage has to last at least ten years and produce offspring before he will get to see the money. Since the bachelor turns 30 a week later, he begins calling his exs in desperate attempt to find a bride, since the love of his life was insulted by his non-proposal earlier (instead of "will you marry me?" he states his case pro and con regarding marriage and tells Renee Zellweger "you win!").

I loved the surprise cameos of his exs, which I won't reveal here so first time viewers can be surprised themselves. They cameos of some famous ladies were a nice touch to lift this film out of the standard cliches of the romantic comedy genre. What clinches this movie for me, in terms of originality and humor is the running of the brides through the streets of San Francisco. Its completely zany and unbelievable, but romantic comedies do have quirks like these to stand out above the rest. The scene is just so outlandishly funny and well done that I thought it saved the movie as a whole. Its reminiscent of "the running of the bulls" in Pamplona, Spain...and considering that Chris O'Donnell played Ernest Hemingway in "In Love and War", I thought that was a nice touch.

There is one major discrepancy with this film. The brides chasing the groom begins at the Amtrak station and its not long until they are running the streets of San Francisco (North Beach?)...yet that is a near impossibility. The Amtrak station is actually across the bay in Emeryville, not San Francisco...so anyone who has been there knows that the makers of this film used a lot of creative license to make the climatic scene flow.

Overall, an amusing film, though by no means a great one. It is entertaining and takes some well deserved pokes at the expectations that both men and women have regarding marriage (loss of freedom for men, fairy-tale fantasy for women, as one amazon reviewer pointed out). See it for what it is...good for a few laughs.

Rating
DateFebruary 10, 2004
Summary50'000 brides can't be wrong
Content
Synopsis:
Jimmie Shannon (Chris O'Donnell), an unabashed bachelor asks his girlfriend Anne (Renee Zellweger) to marry him. But his uncertainty about the change in lifestyle causes him to botch the proposal so badly that she refuses. Soon after, his grandfather dies leaving him 100 million dollars in assets, with one catch. Jimmy must be married by his 30th birthday or he won't get a cent. The bad news is, his 30th birthday is in 24 hours. From there begins a rush against time, first to find his girlfriend and try to change her mind, and then when that fails to find any eligible woman who will agree to marry him on short notice. Will Jimmie realize that he wants to get married after all, and will he get the girl he actually loves?

About the Movie:
In many ways, The Bachelor is an utterly delightful movie, despite its flaws here and there.

One of the most refreshing things I found in this movie was the positive view that was eventually given to marriage. O'Donnel's character goes from a single man who enjoys his single and somewhat philanderous lifestyle to a man who understands the joy of committing heart, soul and body to another person. He comes to realize that some things in life are more important than money or sex. The neatest part about all this is how he comes to this realization. It comes partly through his attempts to find a wife on short notice, but mostly it comes in the voice of a role model that is almost universally denigrated in movies these days... a priest. I found that to be a nice change.

Plotwise, this film is standard romantic comedy material. Boy loses girl, boy seeks girl, girl makes things difficult, boy gets girl. What makes this movie special is the offbeat way the whole situation is presented and eventually resolved. It's just plain fun, especially that memorable chase scene near the end.

The supporting cast (which includes Hal Holbrook, Artie Lang, James Cromwell and Edward Asner) is excellent in this film, though at times a little overplayed. James Cromwell's priest is downright charming and O'Donnell plays his role as the uncertain bachelor rather convincingly. Together with the rest of the cast they make for some great and entertaining comedic moments that are laugh out loud funny.

The only really low spot as far as acting goes is Anne. Renee Zellweger is ok in her role as Anne, but as an actress, I feel she has a tendency to come off as a ditzy blond. Her character suffered a little from that, making her, at least for me, a lot less appealing as the female lead than she could have been.

Like many comedies these days, the Bachelor also suffers from the sex syndrome so prevalent in modern movies. Jimmie has clearly slept around a lot in the past, and it's implied that he and Anne are 'intimate.' Just once I'd like to see a romantic comedy without any sex involved, with a guy who's saving himself for the one he wants to spend his life with. I guess that's too much to hope for. But, I suppose in this movie, the lifestyle fits why he's not so eager to abandon it.

The other issue with this film is the language. The language in The Bachelor is often unnecessarily crude (usually sexual references or unfortunate potty colloquialisms) pushing the rating up to PG-13. It could have been a better, more family friendly film had they kept some of the language a little tamer and less earthy. It hurt the movie, and it didn't have to.

In the end, some of this film is a little clichéd, but overall it holds together pretty well, and makes the payoff at the end definitely worth it. Over all, the Bachelor is a fairly entertaining movie that makes a great date film (if you can overlook the language).

About the DVD:
The Bachelor comes in a cardboard snap case on a single-sided DVD in Widescreen and fullscreen formats with Dolby Digital 5.1 or regular stereo surround sound. This movie's audio tracks are only available in English, and the subtitles only come in English as well. There are no foreign language subtitle or audio tracks on this DVD.

The picture on this DVD is exceptionally clean, even on high resolution screens. This is what DVDs are supposed to look like. The sound is decent, though nothing that will knock you out of your seat.

The special features on this DVD are what you normally see on budget DVD releases, the theatrical trailer for the movie and a cast filmography section. This DVD release has the added bonus, however, of being a PC DVD-ROM with extra features when played on a computer. These include a script to screen feature, access to the original theatrical website and a links to wedding resources.

I've always found the script to screen feature on DVD's to be fascinating. While it's really only any interest to those who enjoy the finer points of film making, it's interesting to read the script while the movie plays. I do have a complaint however. The Script to screen feature forces you to watch the movie in fullscreen while reading the script. As a fan of widescreen, I found that restriction a little annoying.

Bottom Line: A fun film with some flaws on a budget DVD release with one significant extra. I'd give it 3 Stars.


Rating
DateJanuary 07, 2004
SummaryThe life of a bachelor
Content
For men, marriage is often thought of as a major subtraction. Men feel it's all about surrendering their freedom to their new wives, not being able to hang out w/the guys anymore & having to ask for permission to do stuff that they used to do routinely. Wild bachelor parties are typically a symbolic gesture of the guy's last night of happiness and freedom before his autonomy is erased.

For women, on the other hand, the institution of marriage is often thought of in fairy-talesque ways. The prince marries the princess and they live happily ever after. The gentleman chooses the most romantic locale and the most perfect day to pop the question. Then, when he does ask for her hand in marriage, he does it with a poetic eloquence that would rival Keats.

The present movie pokes fun @ both men and women for their pre-conceived notions about marriage. Chris O'Donnell plays a happy-go-lucky independent male who has not yet hit 30. He has seen his friends get "picked off" one-by-one by the marital epidemic.

Meanwhile, the ultra-adorable Renee Zelwegger plays a young woman who has been bred on all the popular fiction about how "perfect" everything will be when she gets married. She's also expecting a breathtakingly perfect evening in which her man will offer her the rest of his life.

As you have probably guessed, these two protaganists fall in love but their different viewpoints cause a great deal of friction. The result is nothing short of a hilarious satire on the differences in how men & women look over a lifelong bond.

There are some zany twists & turns in the plot, but that is the main gist of the storyline. If you like Romantic comedies, this one is a dandy. I'd recommend this film for anyone who has ever been married. And, if you've never been married......I'd recommend this DVD even more!

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