• Genre: Action/Adventure, Drama
  • Release Date: 01/11/2008
  • Running Time: 97 mins
  • Director: Rob Reiner
  • Cast: Jack Nicholson, Morgan Freeman, Sean Hayes, Rob Morrow, Hugh B. Holub, Serena Reeder, Jonathan Mangum, Angela Gardner, Christopher J Stapleton, Roy Vongtama
  • Producer: Alan Greisman, Neil Meron, Rob Reiner, Craig Zadan
  • Writer: Justin Zackham
  • Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures
  • Offical Site: Click Here
  • Watch Trailer
  • Buy Tickets

Box Office

  1. WALL-E, 63.1 million, 63.1 million
  2. Wanted, 50.9 million, 50.9 million
  3. Get Smart, 20.2 million, 77.5 million
  4. Kung Fu Panda, 11.7 million, 179.3 million
  5. The Incredible Hulk, 9.6 million, 115.9 million
  6. The Love Guru, 5.3 million, 25.2 million
  7. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, 5.2 million, 300.1 million
  8. The Happening, 3.9 million, 59.1 million
  9. Sex and the City, 3.8 million, 140.2 million
  10. You Don't Mess With the Zohan, 3.2 million, 91.2 million
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings

The Bucket List

Rob Reiner's latest film is, among other things, a reflection of our persistent cultural belief that you haven't really lived until you've ticked off a list of Earth’s greatest hits. Jack Nicholson plays Edward, a four-times-divorced billionaire who has just been hospitalized with inoperable brain cancer. In a nice twist, he owns the hospital. His roommate is Carter, a retired mechanic with an intellectual streak, played by Morgan Freeman, of course. (Writing the big boss into a shared room took a lot of maneuvering.) Carter is married to his high school sweetheart. Edward ... well, let's just say everybody hates him (see: Something’s Gotta Give, As Good As It Gets). Obviously, this odd couple hits it off. Condemned to die within the year, they dash off a list of things to do before that happens and set out on a trip around the world. Like Kerouac and Cassady, this duo takes to the road mostly to escape into a masculine sphere of their own creation. At the heart of the movie is, of course, the Jack and Morgan Show. Both are skilled at squeezing emotion from a cheeseball script (as is Reiner), and the last half-hour of the film is genuinely moving. Turns out The Bucket List is a meta-film, mostly about how these two legendary actors interact and what it means to be an actor in your own life. — Julia Wallace

Theaters showing The Bucket List

(Click on a showtime to purchase tickets)
Search by...

Movie Title

—OR—

Theater