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The Bucket List

A comedy movie directed by Rob Reiner

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Worthy 'List'

  • Jun 18, 2008
Rating:
+3
(3.5 *`s) You've probably seen the previews, so much elaboration isn't needed, but `Bucket List' is still a worthy journey even if the plot is laid out for you already. Sweet, sage, and funny, Rob Reiner delivers another heartwarming gem that's rejuvenating to watch.

They couldn't be more opposite. Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson) is a wealthy owner of hospitals where the frills are fleeting at best. "We run hospitals, not health spas," Edward brashly tells his potential clients. "Two guests to a room, no exceptions." Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman) is mild and wise. He is a mechanic at a garage supporting his family, but is an academic at heart and a trivia expert who would make Cliff Claven blush. A fellow colleague is always trying to stump him with questions from a trivia book, and Carter's favorite past time is to blurt out the answers (questions really) while watching 'Jeopardy'.

You guessed it. They both have cancer and have to share a room in one of his hospitals. Thomas* (whose real name is Matthew, but is too hard for Edward to keep track of) is his assistant. He can't have his own room because it would be bad PR not to follow his own rules. Edward does get top service by his doctor (Rob Morrow who plays a far different MD than he did on `Northern Exposure'.) The odd couple take a while to warm up to each other. Each is absorbed in his own interests, and each has foibles that would annoy anyone.

As their prospects both turn terminal, Edward comes across Carter's "bucket list". Meant to be a whimsical exercise from Carter's philosophy professor, it gets them thinking about using their precious last moments to do what they haven't done before. Edward has the money but Carter has the wisdom, so sorting out their priorities turns from a final blessing to a final battle. Carter, who always wanted to be a history professor, decides to take up Edward's offer to take a whirlwind tour of the world and discover the joys of skydiving and race car driving to name just two. ("You gonna drive it or give it a dress?" asks an impatient Edward to Carter the mechanic who would truly appreciate the opportunity.)

This is all to the chagrin of Virginia, (also Ginny)[Beverly Todd], Carter's devoted nurse wife. ("You're a fool who's figured out a way not have cancer," she chides her husband. And to Edward: "My husband is not for sale.") Carter rekindles Edward's ability to think deeply. He offers Edward the challenge that below the surface relationships and getting one's house in order really matter. It's not just about the fun.

Once they're on the road, they have several disagreements. One of the best merits of the movie is how it can transition from fun and funny to philosophical. Some may find the whole affair ponderous, but I loved the way both grapple emotionally, physically, and intellectually to the challenges that death provides. If you liked books and movies like 'Tuesdays with Morrie,' then surely 'Bucket List' should appeal to you.

We've all seen "The Little Old Lady from Pasadena" routine so often: Gramps or granny is in a hot rod, saying displaced things like "cool" and "far out." It usually is funny and offensive at the same time. This factor couldn't be more remote from the film. There's never a bitter aftertaste when watching the elderly men doing young things. It's all done thoughtfully and tastefully. The dialogue is excellent. The jokes are funny; the questions posed are interesting, but without the dead ends, for they provide some thoughtful answers as well.

Watching this film reminds me that watching a three-and-a-half-star film can sometimes be more rewarding than watching a full five-star film. In the end, 'The Bucket List' is a feel good movie with some substance that should be put on your movie "list".

(*Sean Hayes whom I recognized, but didn't figure out 'til late to be the 'Will and Grace' star in a far different role.)

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More The Bucket List (2007 movie) reviews
review by . March 16, 2011
When you think about it, The Bucket List is not a horrible movie. It's a creative, somewhat thought-provoking premise, and it has two capable lead actors. However, its main weakness that keeps me from enjoying this movie is its script. The same person that convinced me to watch Pay It Forward is the person that convinced me to watch this, and I liked this better than Pay it Forward. You see, I don't watch movies to be sad, I watch movies either to laugh or appreciate how well-done they …
review by . November 17, 2010
posted in Movie Hype
   I should have loved this film. I really like Nicholson and Freeman. I also enjoy a good dramedy, even those about death -- one of my all-time favorites is Better Off Dead. It must be very difficult to pull off funny when the subject is death, so to do so is impressive. The Bucket List tries, and sometimes gets very close... but I didn't love this film. It was okay. I don't regret the time invested, but, I'm not adding it to my library.      Why?   …
review by . October 20, 2010
posted in Movie Hype
Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson are two of the best actors out there. That alone makes The Bucket List a treat. It features both men at the top of their game. Nicholson as the millionaire hospital magnate and Freeman as the lowly mechanic strike an unlikely friendship while commiserating over their cancer. It's easy for movies about the elderly and death to take on an almost didactic air. However, The Bucket List is a much more subtle about two imperfect men trying to find an appropriate way …
review by . October 16, 2010
Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson are two of the best actors out there. That alone makes The Bucket List a treat. It features both men at the top of their game. Nicholson as the millionaire hospital magnate and Freeman as the lowly mechanic strike an unlikely friendship while commiserating over their cancer. It's easy for movies about the elderly and death to take on an almost didactic air. However, The Bucket List is a much more subtle about two imperfect men trying to find an appropriate way to …
review by . January 25, 2009
posted in Movie Hype
Pros: Nicholson & Freeman - outstanding     Cons: none     The Bottom Line:   “Walk on, walk on  With hope in your heart  And you'll never walk alone,  You'll never walk alone”  ~Rodgers & Hammrstein     Edward Cole is an obscenely rich man. He sits on many boards, owns countless companies, dines with Presidents and Royalty, eats only the best food and dines on the choicest …
review by . December 26, 2008
Pros: Read review     Cons: Read review     The Bottom Line: Heartwarming and entertaining I’d say.      Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie''s plot. A Bucket List: is a list of things to do before one dies that one didn't get a chance to do while alive and, well, well enough to do them. Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson, now there's a combination you no doubt thought you'd never see on the silver …
review by . October 05, 2008
This movie brought tears to my eyes. It was wonderfully performed by the one and only Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman. The story is about two men, Edward, a rich businessman, and Carter, a mechanic. Both men have cancer and are roommates in the hospital. Thinking they will die, they go on a trip around the world trying to fulfill Carter's (Freeman) bucket list: A list of things to do before you kick the bucket (aka die). Throughout the movie, the men deal with their fears, families and foster …
review by . June 15, 2008
Selecting a category for this very fine film results in the all-encompassing label 'mixed media', for lack of a better term. It is smart (with an excellent script by Justin Zackham), addresses some important social issues, and it has moments of touching tenderness and equal moments of very sold comedy. AND it greatly benefits from the casting of Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman, two consummate actors playing out a theme that is unexpectedly a solid study of friendship and love.    Carter …
review by . June 07, 2008
This is a painfully sentimental movie about love and death. You would be a hard soul indeed if you could sit through this without choking just a little. What makes it worth watching is that it calls the question of the bucket list: just what would you do if you knew your time was limited?    If you're willing to stay with it, it also calls for two more reflections:    *What sort of things are on your list? Is it mostly a check-off of things that other people …
review by . April 21, 2008
posted in Movie Hype
Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman) is a relatively happy man. Carter is a self-taught man with a thirst for knowledge that is never quite quenched. He has three children, a devoted wife, and is an ace mechanic. A telephone call one morning from the hospital changes everything. The operation he had months before was unsuccessful and has terminal cancer in the brain. Carter finds himself in the hospital participating in a "promising" experimental treatment. Carter's roommate in the hospital turns out …
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John L. Peterson ()
Ranked #112
I am a substitute teacher who enjoysonline reviewing. Skiing is my favorite pastime; weight training and health are my obsessions;and music and movies feed my psyche. Books are a treasure and a pleasure … more
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"You measure yourself by the people who measure themselves by you," says the quietly wise Carter Chambers, played with gravitas and grace by a Morgan Freeman. In Rob Reiner's moving, often hilarious filmThe Bucket List, all sorts of people measure themselves against the two heroes, Chambers and his hospital suitemate, Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson). But as Cole finds, having spent his entire life building a Fortune 500 company, none of that much matters when cancer, the great equalizer, pays a visit. The film traces the adventures of the two unlikely friends, who meet in a hospital cancer ward, each given six months to live. The "bucket list" of the title refers to a lifelong list of goals that a teacher of Chambers once advised him to compile--and achieve--"before you kick the bucket." Soon the two are off on what may be the last grand adventure of their life, vowing to tick off as many goals (skydiving, race-car driving, seeing the wonders of the world) as they can in the time they have left. What starts as a medical melodrama becomes a road trip, yet the men's mortality realities are never far from thought. The two leads give impressive performances, and remind the viewer of just how few American films focus on the lives and loves of senior citizens. Nicholson even manages to lose his persona in his character, much as he did inAbout Schmidt. There's a lovely John Mayer tune, "Say (What You Need to Say)," that's ...
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