Town & Country (film)

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Town & Country
Directed by Peter Chelsom
Written by Michael Laughlin,
Buck Henry
Starring Warren Beatty
Diane Keaton
Andie MacDowell
Garry Shandling
Jenna Elfman
Nastassja Kinski
Charlton Heston
and Goldie Hawn
Editing by Claire Simpson
Running time 104 min.
Budget $105,000,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Town & Country is a 2001 film starring Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton and directed by Peter Chelsom. It is a romantic comedy in which Beatty plays New York City architect Porter Stoddard, with Keaton as his wife, Ellie, and holds the record for the largest absolute loss (movie budget minus box-office intake) on a movie. [1]

Contents

[edit] Production history

[edit] Production costs

The production costs of the film totaled an estimated USD$90 million,[2] not including distribution and marketing expenses. The total world-wide box office came to $10,365,000.[2] Considering that typically half of the gross box-office receipts go to the exhibitors and half to the filmmakers, Town & Country lost the studio at least $100 million, and probably much more if costs for distribution and marketing are considered, which average around $35–50 million for a studio picture such as this. The studio, having already spent in excess of $90 million, backed a very limited distribution and marketing campaign in the $15-20 million range, bringing the total cost to $105-110 million.

[edit] 1998-1999

The production itself began on 8 June 1998 on a budget of $44 million, including $5 million up front for Warren Beatty. Filming was originally supposed to wrap by the fall of 1998 for a summer or fall 1999 engagement. Various problems occurred during filming, however, including Beatty's meticulous demand for many takes. Also, the script was still being developed, as writers were not satisfied with the ending originally written by Michael Laughlin. Various other screenwriters were brought in, including Paul Attanasio and Gary Ross. By April 1999, production was still going, but Garry Shandling had to leave to film another movie (What Planet Are You From?) and Diane Keaton left to film another movie (Hanging Up). It would take a full year before they could gather the cast back together to film the new pages that had now been written by Buck Henry.

[edit] 2000 reshoots

Reshoots began on 10 April 2000, and wrapped by late April/early May 2000. More money was spent since the other cast members had to be paid their full salaries again.

[edit] Release and reception

The movie finally made it into theaters on 27 April 2001, nearly three years after filming began. It received generally poor reviews and was called "boorish" and "obtuse" by one reviewer.[3] It holds a generally poor rating on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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