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Bedtime Stories (film)

Bedtime Stories (film)

FieldValue
nameBedtime Stories
imageBedtime stories.jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorAdam Shankman
producer{{Plainlist
screenplay{{Plainlist
storyMatt Lopez
starring{{Plainlist
musicRupert Gregson-Williams
cinematographyMichael Barrett
editing{{Plainlist
studio{{Plainlist
distributorWalt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
released
runtime99 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$80 million
gross$212.9 million
  • Andrew Gunn
  • Adam Sandler
  • Jack Giarraputo
  • Matt Lopez
  • Tim Herlihy
  • Adam Sandler
  • Keri Russell
  • Guy Pearce
  • Russell Brand
  • Richard Griffiths
  • Jonathan Pryce
  • Courteney Cox
  • Lucy Lawless
  • Teresa Palmer
  • Tom Costain
  • Michael Tronick
  • Walt Disney Pictures
  • Happy Madison Productions
  • Gunn Films
  • Offspring Entertainment Motion Pictures](walt-disney-studios-motion-pictures) Bedtime Stories is a 2008 American fantasy comedy film directed by Adam Shankman from a screenplay by Matt Lopez and Tim Herlihy based on a story by Lopez. It stars Adam Sandler in his first appearance in a family film, alongside Keri Russell, Guy Pearce, Aisha Tyler, Russell Brand, Richard Griffiths, Teresa Palmer, Lucy Lawless, and Courteney Cox. In the film, a hotel handyman's stories to his niece and nephew come true, and his stories become more outlandish. Sandler's production company Happy Madison Productions and Andrew Gunn's company Gunn Films co-produced the film with Walt Disney Pictures.

The film premiered on December 25, 2008, by Disney. Despite the film being a box office success, earning $212.9 million against an $80 million budget, it received generally negative reviews from critics.

Plot

In 1974, Skeeter and Wendy Bronson are raised by their father Marty at the family business, the Sunny Vista Motel. However, despite being a good hotelier and host, Marty faces serious financial problems and almost goes bankrupt. Marty sells the motel to his good friend Barry Nottingham, the severely germaphobic CEO and founder of hotel chain Nottingham Hotels, in a forced liquidation. Nottingham rebuilds and renovates the motel into a luxury hotel named the Sunny Vista Nottingham, on the condition that Skeeter will run it when he is grown up. 34 years later, Skeeter is stuck as the hotel's hardworking repairman. Nottingham announces plans to close the hotel in order to build a bigger one, named the Sunny Vista Mega Nottingham, and appoints the snotty Kendall Duncan as its future manager, simply because he is dating Nottingham's daughter, Violet, though he is secretly having an affair with the hotel manager Aspen.

Wendy asks Skeeter to watch her children, Patrick and Bobbi, because the school at which she is the principal is closing down and she is looking for a job in Arizona. The first night, Skeeter cynically tells them a bedtime story in which he casts himself as an underdog peasant in a medieval fantasy world, who is unfairly passed over for promotion. Dissatisfied with the story’s unhappy ending, the children add that he at least gets a chance at the promotion and that it starts raining gumballs.

The next day, the story miraculously comes true: Nottingham, recalling the original promise he made to Marty, gives Skeeter a shot at the manager position; and on his way home, gumballs rain on Skeeter from a truck crash on an overpass. The next night, at the hotel, Skeeter tells a wild west-style story in which he, as a cowboy, is freely given an expensive horse named Ferrari, and saves a troubled damsel from bandits. Going out later that night, he saves Violet from obnoxious paparazzi. He then sees Violet’s Ferrari car and mistakenly thinks she will give it to him before Violet drives away. Skeeter realizes that only the children's additions to the stories come true. The night after that, Skeeter, with the children's help, tells a story about a chariot-riding stuntman in Ancient Greece who wins a date with the “fairest maiden in the land”. The next day, Skeeter ends up spending the day with and falling for his sister's friend and colleague Jill.

On Skeeter’s last night with the children, he tells them a space opera-style story in which he triumphs over Kendall in a duel. The children, recalling how Skeeter told them on their first night that there are no happy endings in real life, add that someone kills him with a fireball. Skeeter and Kendall both make presentations on how best to market the hotel. With his heartfelt speech on family, Skeeter ultimately wins the managerial position. However, he learns from Kendall that the new Nottingham Hotel will be at the location of the closing school and, paranoid against fire due to the story, blasts a fire extinguisher at Nottingham's cake and is "fired".

Skeeter, much to the surprise of Jill and Nottingham, manages to get the hotel’s location moved to the beachfront in Santa Monica. Skeeter and Jill then race to the school to prevent it from being demolished. While at the site, protesting the school’s closure, Bobbi and Patrick sneak into the building to give their sign a better view. Skeeter and Jill arrive just in time to stop Kendall from setting off the highly sensitive explosives, saving the children and the school.

Sometime later, Skeeter marries Jill and opens a motel named after his father, with Kendall and Aspen demoted to the motel's waiting staff. Violet marries Skeeter's best friend, Mickey, giving him control of the Nottingham Empire. Nottingham overcomes his extreme germaphobia, quitting the hotel industry to become a school nurse, and newlywed Skeeter and Jill have a baby boy.

Cast

  • Adam Sandler as Skeeter Bronson
    • Thomas Hoffman as Young Skeeter Bronson
  • Keri Russell as Jill Hastings
  • Guy Pearce as Kendall Duncan
  • Russell Brand as Mickey
  • Richard Griffiths as Barry Nottingham
    • Tim Herlihy as Young Barry Nottingham
  • Jonathan Pryce as Martin "Marty" Bronson
  • Courteney Cox as Wendy Bronson
    • Abigail Droeger as Young Wendy Bronson
  • Lucy Lawless as Aspen
  • Teresa Palmer as Violet Nottingham
  • Aisha Tyler as Donna Hynde
  • Laura Ann Kesling as Bobbi
  • Jonathan Morgan Heit as Patrick
  • Kathryn Joosten as Mrs. Dixon
    • Melany Mitchell as Young Mrs. Dixon
  • Andrew Collins as Mr. Dixon
  • Annalise Basso as Tricia Sparks
  • Nick Swardson as Engineer
  • Allen Covert as Ferrari Guy
  • Carmen Electra as Hot Girl
  • Blake Clark and Bill Romanowski as Bikers
  • Mikey Post as Angry Dwarf / Jimmy
  • Rob Schneider as Indian Chief/The Robber (uncredited)
  • Arne Starr as Nottingham Employee / Senator /Cowboy / Spaceman (uncredited)
  • Jonathan Loughran and Bob Harvey as Party Guests

Production

Director Adam Shankman describes Adam Sandler's character as "a sort of 'Cinderfella' character" and adds that "'He's like Han Solo ...'" It was filmed at various locations in California, including in Thousand Oaks where Mr. Nottingham's palace is set.

Music

The score to Bedtime Stories was composed by Rupert Gregson-Williams, who recorded his score with the Hollywood Studio Symphony at the Newman Scoring Stage at 20th Century Fox. The song "Don't Stop Believin'" is played during the film and during the end credits.

Theatrical release

The film was released in the United States on December 25, 2008, in Poland on January 23, 2009, and in Sweden on February 20, 2009.

Reception

Critical response

[[Adam Sandler]] at Cannes in 2002

On Rotten Tomatoes, Bedtime Stories has an approval rating of 27% based on 111 reviews, with an average rating of 4.4/10. The site's consensus states, "Though it may earn some chuckles from pre-teens, this kid-friendly Adam Sandler comedy is uneven, poorly paced, and lacks the requisite whimsy to truly work." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 33 out of 100 based on 26 reviews, "generally unfavorable" reviews. Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F.

Box office

Slashfilm predicted that Bedtime Stories would open #1 during the December 25–28, 2008 Christmas weekend due to its family appeal and the box office draw of Adam Sandler, but it came at #3 grossing $38 million behind Marley & Me and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. However, during the standard 3-day weekend, it jumped ahead of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button ranking #2 behind Marley & Me with $27.5 million. As of February 2009, the film had grossed $110,101,975 in the United States and Canada and $102,772,467 in other countries, totaling $212,874,442 worldwide.

Home media

The film was released on Blu-ray Disc and DVD on April 7, 2009. The DVD was released as a single disc or a two-disc edition including behind-the-scenes featurettes. Commercials advertising the discs feature background music recycled from the film Back to the Future Part III. As of November 1, 2009, the DVD has sold 2,835,662 copies generating $49,409,944 in sales revenue.

Accolades

;Australian Film Institute 2009

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
AFI International AwardBest ActorGuy Pearce

;BMI Film & TV Awards 2009

AwardNomineeResult
BMI Film Music AwardRupert Gregson-Williams

;Kids' Choice Awards, USA 2009

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
Blimp AwardFavorite Movie
Favorite Movie ActorAdam Sandler

;Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA 2009

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
Golden Reel AwardBest Sound Editing - Music in a Feature FilmJ.J. George (supervising music editor)
Kevin Crehan (music editor)
Tom Kramer (music editor)

;Young Artist Awards 2009

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
Young Artist AwardBest Performance in a Feature Film - Supporting Young ActorJohntae Lipscomb

References

References

  1. "Bedtime Stories". [[American Film Institute]].
  2. "Bedtime Stories (2008) - Financial Information".
  3. "Bedtime Stories (2008)".
  4. As quoted in "First Look: Behind the scenes of Hollywood's biggest projects," ''Entertainment Weekly'' 1025 (December 12, 2008): 9.
  5. "Bedtime Stories (2008) - IMDb".
  6. (13 February 2017). "Best Movies Filmed in Thousand Oaks!".
  7. [http://www.scoringsessions.com/news/162 Rupert Gregson-Williams scores ''Bedtime Stories''] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-11-30 . ''ScoringSessions.com''. Retrieved 2008-12-17.)
  8. "Bedtime Stories (2008)".
  9. "Bedtime Stories".
  10. "Cinemascore".
  11. [http://www.slashfilm.com/2008/12/24/box-office-tracking-bedtime-stories-could-be-the-biggest-christmas-day-opening-of-all-time Box Office Tracking: Bedtime Stories Could Be The Biggest Christmas Day Opening of All-Time] {{Webarchive. link. (2009-01-22 . ''[[/Film]]''. Retrieved 2008-12-24.)
  12. link. (2010-03-28 . ''[[Box Office Mojo]]''. Retrieved 2009-01-02.)
  13. [http://www.the-numbers.com/dvd/charts/annual/2009.php Bedtime Stories - Box Office Data, Movie News, Cast Information] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-05-15 . ''The Numbers''. Retrieved 2010-10-26.)
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