Bachelor Party (film)
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Bachelor Party | |
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The movie poster for Bachelor Party. |
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Directed by | Neal Israel |
Produced by | Bob Israel Ron Moler Raju Patel |
Written by | Bob Israel Neal Israel Pat Proft |
Starring | Tom Hanks Tawny Kitaen Robert Prescott Wendie Jo Sperber Deborah Harmon George Grizzard Michael Dudikoff Gary Grossman |
Music by | Robert Folk |
Cinematography | Hal Trussell |
Editing by | Tom Walls |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date(s) | June 29, 1984 |
Running time | 105 min. |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Budget | $6,000,000 |
IMDb profile |
Tagline: "Shocking, Shameless, Sinful, Wicked. And the party hasn't even started."
"A man's tradition every woman should know about."
Bachelor Party is a 1984 comedy film starring Tom Hanks, Tawny Kitaen, Adrian Zmed, Robert Prescott, and Deborah Harmon.
The plot involves party-animal Rick (Hanks) deciding to settle down and marry his girlfriend Debbie (Kitaen) and his friends throwing him one final debauchery-laden bash. Debbie suspects Rick of future cheating on her at the bash and, with the help of his friends' spouses, hatches a plan to catch him in the act.
A notorious scene in the film involves a quaalude-popping, cocaine-snorting donkey who dies of a drug overdose.
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[edit] Production
In 1981, Gary Grossman threw a bachelor party for his friend Bob Israel. Inspired by the occasion, Israel and fellow advertising specialist Ron Moler decided to produce a comedy about the ritual. As first-time producers, however, they needed to secure financial backing for the film. Normally, this would be accomplished by presenting potential backers a finished script. For Bachelor Party, Israel and Moler instead created a mock ad campaign that so impressed Twin Continental Films that they provided the producers with the necessary funds to develop the project. Israel brought in his brother Neal to direct, and together they worked out a storyline, that Neal and Pat Proft expanded into a final script. Realizing the project’s commercial potential, executive producer Joe Roth sent the screenplay - accompanied by the poster campaign - to 20th Century Fox, who agreed to distribute the film upon its completion.
Filming of Bachelor Party began on August 15, 1983, and production was completed on November 11, 1983. Two days into production, filming was suspended and Bachelor Party went on hiatus for one month while the filmmakers recast the parts. Production resumed in September with the new cast. The following actors were replaced:
- Paul Reiser - Rick Gassko (replaced by Tom Hanks)
- Kelly McGillis - Debbie Thompson (replaced by Tawny Kitaen)
- Andy Bumatai - Rudy LeForte (replaced by Barry Diamond)
[edit] Trivia
- The restaurant where Ryko works is “A Drinking and Gathering Place”, according to the decal on the outside window. The name of the restaurant is obscured.
- The pin-ups on Rick and Debbie’s refrigerator are drawings of Flintstones characters.
- The movie Brad is watching on TV in the hotel room is The Little Princess, a 1939 drama starring Shirley Temple.
- Rosanne Katon (Darlene, one of the “twins of pleasure”) was a centerfold in the September 1978 issue of Playboy magazine.
- The husband of the honeymoon couple is screenwriter Pat Proft.
- The space battle scenes on the movie screen (where Rick fights Cole) are from the 1980 movie Battle Beyond the Stars.
- The producers seriously considered the then unknown Jim Carrey, Tim Robbins and Howie Mandel for the role of Rick Gassko, and Julia Louis-Dreyfuss and Linda Hamilton for the role of Debbie Thompson.
[edit] Locations
- The location for the Parkview Hotel was the Los Angeles Biltmore, located in uptown Los Angeles, California.
• St. Gabriel's Catholic School (shown in the opening scene of the film) is really John Marshall High School, located at 3939 Tracy Street in Los Angeles.
[edit] Box office
The U.S. theatrical gross was $38,435,947, and U.S. video rentals were last calculated at $19,070,000.
[edit] Bachelor Party in pop culture
- It is referenced in the films Get Over It (2001), How High (2001), and Clerks II (2006).