The Bachelor
Born Today
Home / The Bachelor

The Bachelor

Year:
Duration:
101 min
Genres:
Comedy
IMDB rate:
5
Director:
Gary Sinyor
Details
Country: USA
Release Date: 1999-11-05
Filming Locations: Cook Ranch, Galisteo, New Mexico, USA
Earnings
Budget: $21,000,000
Opening Weekend: $7,480,288 (USA) (7 November 1999)
Gross: $21,731,001 (USA) (20 February 2000)
Cast
Actor
Character
Renée Zellweger
Renée Zellweger
The Bachelor
Chris O'Donnell
Jimmie Shannon
Artie Lange
Marco
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
Mariah Carey
Ilana
Sarah Silverman
Carolyn
Jennifer Esposito
Daphne
Brooke Shields
Buckley Hale-Windsor
Lydell M. Cheshier
Sanzel
Robert Kotecki
Hodgman
Pat Finn
Bolt
Timothy Paul Perez
Stone
Romy Rosemont
Rita
Kelly Jean Peters
Waitress
Jane L. Powell
Starlight Room Singer
Jim Jackman
Nervous Guy
Christopher Carroll
Maitre D'
Kevin Jones
Max the Florist
Michael Deeg
Customer
Erik Kever Ryle
Customer
Brian Leonard
Customer
Mary J. White
Florist Assistant
Edith Fields
Edith
Joe Meek
Trader
Michael Lee Merrins
Trader
Lisa Nalen
'Anne' on the Street
Brantley Bush
Stagehand
Nicholas Pryor
Dale Arden
Maree Cheatham
Mona Arden
Mark Norby
Suspect
Ken Baldwin
Salsa Dancer
Gustavo Vargas
Salsa Dancer
Natalie Bartlett
O'Dell's Daughter
Cheri Rae Russell
Biker Bride
Jodi Taylor
Older Bride
Jenni Pulos
Big Hair Bride
Rebecca Gray
Punk Bride
Kiva Dawson
Punk Bride
Anastasia Horne
Preppy Bride
Niecy Nash
African-American Bride
T.L. Brooke
Big Bride
Marnie Alexenburg
Brunette Bride
Lea Llovio
Latina Bride (as Lea Moon Llovio)
Robin Lyon
Questioning Bride
Elizabeth Guber
Questioning Bride
Nancy O'Dell
Questioning Bride
Marnie Schneider
Muslim Bride
Louis Ganapoler
Baker
Chace Acton
Girl on swing (uncredited)
Andy Arness
Businessman (uncredited)
Jason Aaron Baca
Groomsmen #3 (uncredited)
Tracey Evans
Questioning Bride (uncredited)
Steve Hosford
Trader (uncredited)
Johnny Liska
Newsstand Vendor (uncredited)
Janean Christine Mariani
Questioning Bride (uncredited)
Amy Mills
Questioning Bride (uncredited)
Shenita Moore
Afro Bride (uncredited)
Cal Nguyen
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Johan-Carl Nowack
Groomsmen (uncredited)
Stephany Storey
Bride (uncredited)
Scott Trimble
Stockbroker (uncredited)
Did you know?
Trivia
One of the brides mentions that she "went to Princeton where Brooke Shields went". Brooke Shields plays Buckley in the movie.
Share this
Several of the brides chasing the bachelor at the end of this movie are male extras in drag.
Share this
This movie is based on the Buster Keaton silent film Seven Chances (1925). This film was shot in San Francisco, filming in some of the same areas that Keaton used for another film Daydreams (1922).
Share this
Goofs
When Jimmie is at his grandfather's funeral, he says "...he rose up and called the doctors scum suckers." But that is clearly not what his mouth says.
Share this
When the brides chase Jimmie down the streets of San Francisco you hear the sound of women running in high heels, but the brides are all wearing sneakers.
Share this
Annie is shown waiting for the Amtrak train in Mendocino. Amtrak does not service Mendocino.
Share this
Quotes
Preppy Bride: Thank God I'm bisexual
Share this
Roy O'Dell: Time for desperate measures. What about my daughter?
Share this
Jimmie: [playing pool with Marco] Stripes wins, I propose.
Share this
Faq
Q
Did David Belasco write the "original" upon which The Bachelor is based?
A
When a movie is based on an earlier work (book, play, or remade movie) the WGA makes decisions about how much writing credit to adapt from the original work. In this case, the history is as follows:Roi Cooper Magrue wrote the play Seven Chances.David Belasco rewrote it for Broadway and produced it on Broadway.Magrue wrote a movie adaptation for Buster Keaton, basing it on his original script. Keaton was not satisfied with the movie script and had Clyde Bruckman, Jean Havez, and Joe Mitchell rewrite, to bring it closer to the Broadway play. This ma have been a commercial decision, instead of a creative one, owing to the Belasco's well-known success as producer versus Magrue's relative obscurity as a writer.Because of the movie rewrite, Magrue was not given the screenwriting credit, but was given the adaptation credit, and a secondary playwrite edit. The rewrites brought the movie closer to the Broadway version, so Keaton gave Belasco primary playwright credit, and Magrue got a secondary playwright credit (after Belasco) and the adaptation credit. At this point the tables are somewhat tirned, sice for Broadway, it was Belasco who adapted from Magrue.Steve Cohen rewrote Buster Keaton's movie for its remake, "The Bachelor."Because of the series of rewites going from play scripy to Broadway to movie script to rewrite to remake, it appears the WGA decided that David Belasco's Broadway play was sufficientl far removed from the remade movie that he was not entitled to credit for it. Nevertheless, since the earliest version of this work is Magrue's original play, Magrue is still given a playwrite credit in The Bachelor, for the PLAY "Seven Chances." Oddly, this mans that an intermediate work that influenced the first movie is left out of the credits, while an earlier work is included.So, yes Virginia, David Belasco did write some version of the original, but the movie is deemed so far from his work that he is disassociated from it.
Share this
Photos from cast
Renée Zellweger
Educational Classes Theme Winter christmas snowman clip art clipart snowman transparent happy