The Bucket List Movie Review
The Bucket List Review
"The Bucket List" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Rob ReinerProducer : Craig Zadan,Neil Meron,Alan Greisman,Rob Reiner
Screenwiter : Justin Zackham
Starring : Jack Nicholson,Morgan Freeman,Sean Hayes,Rob Morrow
There will likely be people out there who will like The Bucket List. They will
like its easy-to-follow premise, the hollow and overplayed jokes that
occasionally come rumbling along, and the AARP-approved folksiness. And they'll
really like Jack Nicholson, mugging for the camera as though terrified people
will forget that he's still that same devilish old scamp he's been for longer
than most moviegoers have been alive. This is not to say that the reason The
Bucket List is a terrible film is because there are so many people out there
predisposed to liking it. The Bucket List is a terrible film because it's
thinly-conceived and even more thinly-executed faux serenity for the masses
whose overbearing sentimentality trivializes death in a manner that's truly
disturbing, even for Hollywood. But it will find its audience -- many terrible
films do.
The conceit behind Justin Zackham's cloying script is a sort of retiree
meet-cute: Stick two old guys from completely different backgrounds with
utterly opposite points of view in the same hotel room, tell them both they've
got terminal diseases that will kill them in a number of months, and then watch
them try desperately to do everything in life they've never gotten around to.
Make one of those old guys Nicholson and the other Morgan Freeman, add in a
director like Rob Reiner who's shown himself in the past to possess both a
sense of humor and compassion, and it would seem that the producers would have
on their hands a film sure to please nearly everybody: raunchy camaraderie
mixed in with earthy wisdom that stares death in the face and dares to crack a
smile. Needless to say, that isn't the case here.
Freeman plays by far the more interesting of the two men: Carter Chambers, a
lifelong mechanic and family man who also happens to be a fearsomely learned
autodidact. Stoic and distant from his loving family, he's the kind of guy
who's too gentlemanly to bother the hospital staff busy attending to his
roommate. Nicholson plays Edward Cole, who's a favorite sort of Hollywood
villain, a soullessly money-grubbing social-climber of a billionaire who cares
more for his elaborate coffeemaker setup than actual human beings (in other
words: probably not so different from many of the guys running movie studios).
Neither actor is ultimately able to escape type -- Freeman is noble but flawed,
Nicholson rascally and venal -- though for some of the film's early stretches
they do at least seem to be trying; they are movie stars for a reason, after
all.
If there's a point to be made in The Bucket List's favor, it's that it doesn't
unnecessarily rush. To their credit, the filmmakers spend a good amount of time
just with Chambers and Cole in that small hospital room, letting the odd couple
warm up to each other. That way, once Cole decides that the two have to take
Chambers' bucket list (an old classroom exercise to list all the things one
wants to do in life) and start dashing around the world crossing things off, as
horrible as the film becomes, at least you can believe these two very different
men could actually stand each other's company.
Once the film gets seriously into its globe-trotting adventure segments (the
Himalayas, the Taj Mahal) and extreme buddy bonding (racing cars, sky diving),
it quickly starts to look less like a film than a series of travel ads targeted
at active seniors. The primary difference is that most commercials wouldn't be
so clearly studio-shot as this film is, with some astonishingly clumsy-looking
backgrounds straining to look like a lush Mediterranean beach or the African
savannah.
After the Cole-funded race around the globe, the inevitable catches up with our
fair actors, and once that happens, it's a quick slide from mediocre fun-having
into schlocky tear-wrangling of the worst kind, as though the filmmakers were
trying to cram the worst of Hollywood into one picture. If so, they've
succeeded.
Find the writer immediately.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





