Two terminally ill men try to fulfill a wish list known as "The Bucket List" before each kicks the bucket. After they break out of a cancer ward, they head off on a road trip with an itinerary that includes racing cars, eating giant plates of caviar and slinging poker chips in Monte Carlo.
The Bucket List is a feel-good film about death, a sitcom about mortality, "Ikiru" for meatheads. It's also a picture about two cancer patients confronting reality, and deciding how they want to spend their presumed last days, that has not an ounce of reality about it. For all these reasons, along with the star power of Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman, this refitting of the grumpy old men genre stands a good chance of becoming director Rob Reiner's first hit since the mid-'90s, even though its prevailing sensibility will eventually make it look more at home on small screens.
In Reiner's world, the opening scene showing auto mechanic Carter Chambers (...
An emotional ride of the lives of two dying men coming to grips with the end of their lives. Freeman and Nicholson gel together so well as they form a friendship which will leave you with tears in your eyes and a smile on your face.
Wonderfully emotional ride!
Two men who realise their own mortality, and with only months left to live, plan out their 'Bucket List' of things to do before they die. In the hands of a lesser cast and crew, this could have just been yet-another-sugary-syrup-weepy film. However here, with the presence of Nicholson and Freeman, the film offers the expected emotions, but plenty of chuckles as the pair bicker, banter, and live out their dreams. A really well made film which shows us all what life is really all about, The Bucket List is a pleasing 90 minutes of viewing recommended to anyone.
Wonderfully emotional ride!
Two men who realise their own mortality, and with only months left to live, plan out their 'Bucket List' of things to do before they die. In the hands of a lesser cast and crew, this could have just been yet-another-sugary-syrup-weepy film. However here, with the presence of Nicholson and Freeman, the film offers the expected emotions, but plenty of chuckles as the pair bicker, banter, and live out their dreams. A really well made film which shows us all what life is really all about, The Bucket List is a pleasing 90 minutes of viewing recommended to anyone.
The Bucket List arrives on Christmas Day to remind us to live life to its fullest and leave no clich?? unturned. And while most of us would confess to not exactly seizing each day as if it is our last, another cloying reminder from Hollywood is probably not going to make any more of a difference than an afternoon spent on the couch with Dr. Phil and Oprah.
A travelogue of triteness that demands alliteration to describe it, the movie is clearly aimed at fading boomers with its story of two older men with terminal medical conditions. Its watchability almost entirely depends on your tolerance of Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson doing the things that m...
Edward Cole (Nicholson) is an arrogant, surly businessman. Carter Chambers (Freeman) is a dignified, knowledgeable car mechanic. Both have cancer, which throws them together in a hospital owned by Edward. "I want my own room! It's my hospital!" demands Edward, but as his personal assistant Tom (Hayes) reminds him, he's built the reputation of his private healthcare establishments on certain values, notably "two beds for every room, no exceptions". So he has to lump it. However, despite Edward's initial misgivings about sharing the room with a prole, the two men bond over being old, having chemo and vomiting from the treatment.
If you are new to watching movies online, this guide will certainly help you. Read full guide...
At Two-Movies.com we share with you the links to sites that have the films ready for you to watch. All you need to
do is select the source site. So click on the chosen link, close any pop-up advertisements, and press play. The
higher the rating a source file has - the better.
From time to time the source files may have been removed and the link won't work. If this is the case please let us
know by reporting broken links.
And don't forget to vote on the quality of the link you choose; by giving it the thumbs up or the thumb down. We
welcome feedback so let us know how you got on.