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1999 film by Garry Marshall From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Runaway Bride is a 1999 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall, and starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The screenplay, written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon, is about a reporter (Gere) who undertakes to write a story about a woman (Roberts) who has left a string of fiancés at the altar.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2015) |
Runaway Bride | |
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Directed by | Garry Marshall |
Written by | |
Produced by | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Stuart Dryburgh |
Edited by | Bruce Green |
Music by | James Newton Howard |
Production companies | |
Distributed by |
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Release date |
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Running time | 116 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $70 million |
Box office | $309.5 million |
It is the second film to co-star Gere and Roberts, following Pretty Woman (1990). It received generally negative reviews from critics but was a commercial success, grossing $309 million worldwide.
Maggie Carpenter is a spirited, attractive young woman who has had a number of unsuccessful relationships. She has left a trio of fiancés at the altar on their wedding day, earning local notoriety and the nickname "The Runaway Bride”.
Misanthropic New York columnist Ike Graham writes an unflattering article about Maggie after hearing her story from a man in a bar. Unbeknownst to Ike, the man is one of her bitter ex-fiancés, and the account is riddled with errors. After Maggie sends a scathing rebuttal to the newspaper, Ike is fired for not verifying the facts. Later, his boss offers him a chance to restore his reputation by writing an in-depth, truthful article about Maggie, if only to prove that she is indeed the heartless "man-eater" he claimed her to be.
Ike travels to Hale, Maryland, where Maggie works at her family's hardware store and makes designer lamps out of spare industrial parts. She is now on her fourth attempt to be married; the groom-to-be, Bob Kelly, is a high school football coach who constantly speaks in sports analogies and has been working with Maggie to help her “visualize” the wedding. Ike follows Maggie around town and speaks with her friends, family, and former fiancés, all of whom are happy to share their thoughts. Fed up with his intrusiveness, she offers him the opportunity to spend time with her one-on-one and see for himself that she is not a bad person. During this period, Ike and Maggie grow closer, each using the other’s feedback to make improvements in their personal lives.
As Ike researches Maggie's history, he discovers that she adopts the interests of each of her fiancés, noted most prominently by her choice of eggs. At a pre-wedding luau celebration, he defends Maggie from the public mockery she receives at a roast from her family and guests, causing her to leave the room in embarrassment. Ike confronts Maggie outside and accuses her of not truly knowing herself; she in turn calls him out for his cynicism, suggesting he uses his column to mock the lives of others because he is too afraid to pursue a meaningful life for himself.
At the wedding rehearsal, Bob walks Maggie down the aisle to help her practice her “visualization” techniques, asking Ike to stand in for him as the groom. When she reaches the altar, Ike and Maggie unexpectedly share a passionate kiss and admit their feelings for each other. Chagrined, Bob punches him in the face and storms out of the church. Afterwards, Ike proposes that since the wedding has already been arranged, he and Maggie should get married, to which Maggie agrees.
On the day of the ceremony, which is heavily attended by the media, Bob advises Ike to maintain eye contact with Maggie to reassure her. While the advice works at first, a camera flash temporarily blinds Ike, breaking Maggie's concentration, and she suddenly gets cold feet and flees. Ike pursues her, but she evades him by jumping onto the back of a passing FedEx truck. Heartbroken, Ike returns to New York.
In the following weeks, Maggie works to discover herself, sampling different egg dishes to determine her true favorite and putting her lamps up for sale in New York City shops. One night, Ike returns to his apartment to find Maggie inside waiting for him. She explains that she ran from her previous weddings because the men did not know who she truly was, in part due to her efforts to conform to their preferences. However, with Ike she ran because even though he truly understood her, she did not understand herself. Maggie never told her exes what she wanted in the wedding, she wanted a private ceremony in a weekday when people go to work and kids go to school and ride off the sunset with horses. Maggie symbolically "turns in" her running shoes to Ike, then gets down on one knee and proposes using one of his previous speeches.
The two are married in a private ceremony on a hillside, forgoing the big weddings that Maggie notes she never actually liked. Afterwards, the newlyweds ride away on horseback while their friends and family celebrate.
In a post-credit scene, Maggie and Ike play together in the snow, revealing that their marriage is still going strong.
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2023) |
The film was in development for over a decade. Actors attached at various times: Anjelica Huston, Mary Steenburgen, Lorraine Bracco, Geena Davis, Demi Moore, Sandra Bullock, Ellen DeGeneres, Téa Leoni (for the role of Maggie); Christopher Walken, Harrison Ford, Mel Gibson, Michael Douglas (for the role of Ike) and Ben Affleck (for the role of Bob). Director Michael Hoffman was attached. The film used a number of callbacks to Roberts's and Gere's prior work, Pretty Woman. These references included the reframing of the store scene where she was blocked from buying the clothes. Writers Elaine May and Leslie Dixon did unused rewrites.[1]
Much of the film production took place in and around historic Berlin, Maryland, which was made over to become the fictitious town of Hale, Maryland. Main Street in Berlin as well as some of the landmarks such as the Atlantic Hotel were left nearly as-is during production, while some of the business names on Main Street were changed.[citation needed]
Coco Lee performed the theme song, "Before I Fall in Love."[citation needed]
The film premiered on July 30, 1999 with $12 million on its opening day.[2] In its opening weekend, the film peaked at #1 with $35.1 million.[3][4] The film would hold the record for having the highest opening weekend for a Julia Roberts film until 2001 when Ocean's Eleven took it.[5]
By the end of its run, the film had grossed $152.3 million in the United States and Canada, and an international gross of $157.2 million, altogether making $309.5 million worldwide.[6]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 46% of 87 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The website's consensus reads: "Cliché story with lack of chemistry between Richard Gere and Julia Roberts."[7] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 39 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[8]
The Los Angeles Times wrote: "Runaway Bride's Josann McGibbon & Sara Parriott script is so muddled and contrived, raising issues only to ignore them or throw them away, you wonder why so many people embraced it."[9] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 2/4 stars, saying: "After seeing Gere and Roberts play much smarter people (even in romantic comedies), it is painful to see them dumbed down here. The screenplay is so sluggish, they're like Derby winners made to carry extra weight."[10] The New York Times said: "More often, the film is like a ride through a car wash: forward motion, familiar phases in the same old order and a sense of being carried along steadily on a well-used track. It works without exactly showing signs of life."[11]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Performing Artist | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" | U2 | 4:40 | |
2. | "Ready to Run" | Dixie Chicks | 3:52 | |
3. | "I Love You" |
| Martina McBride | 2:54 |
4. | "Maneater" | Hall & Oates | 4:32 | |
5. | "From My Head to My Heart" | Evan and Jaron | 3:13 | |
6. | "Blue Eyes Blue" | Diane Warren | Eric Clapton | 4:42 |
7. | "And That's What Hurts" |
| Hall & Oates | 4:03 |
8. | "Never Saw Blue Like That" |
| Shawn Colvin | 4:39 |
9. | "You Can't Hurry Love" | Dixie Chicks | 3:07 | |
10. | "You Sang to Me" | Marc Anthony | 5:26 | |
11. | "You're the Only One for Me" |
| Allure | 4:04 |
12. | "Before I Fall in Love" |
| CoCo Lee | 3:44 |
13. | "Where Were You (On Our Wedding Day)?" |
| Billy Joel | 1:59 |
14. | "It Never Entered My Mind" | Miles Davis | 4:02 | |
Total length: | 54:57 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Canada (Music Canada)[16] | Platinum | 100,000^ |
United States (RIAA)[17] | Platinum | 1,000,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
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