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“Unveiling the Lost Gem: Inside Tom Hanks’s Wild 80s Bachelor Party Adventure!”

Added on December 1, 2024 inFree Entertainment News, Free Movie News
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Ah, Bachelor Party, the film that not only defines Tom Hanks’ racy side but also serves up a buffet of outrageous comedy from the ’80s! Remember that donkey scene? The one where the little guy decides to take a snort of cocaine—talk about a wild night out! If you thought R-rated comedies were just a recent phenomenon, think again! This forgotten gem once reigned supreme as that late-night sleepover flick that had us belly-laughing and questioning our life choices.

But here’s the kicker: despite making a tidy profit when it released in 1984, this hilarious romp has become as hard to find as a decent salad at a barbecue. How is it that a movie with a plot featuring drugged-up donkeys is gathering dust, while we have a plethora of streaming options? And let’s not even get started on the irony—while it’s tough to find in the U.S., it’s actually streaming on Disney Plus in Canada. Seriously, what’s up with that?

So, let’s dive into the wild and whimsical world of Bachelor Party, explore why it deserves a fresh look, and hold down a candid discussion on whether Disney should open the vault and let some of these classics back into the spotlight. LEARN MORE.

Bachelor Party is definitely the raciest film Tom Hanks has ever been in, but this R-rated comedy classic is tough to find nowadays.

bachelor party movie

There’s scene in 1984’s Bachelor Party perfectly sums up just how stupid – and hilarious – the movie is. It involves a donkey overdosing on cocaine. Not because anyone gave the donkey cocaine, mind you. No, it’s the donkey’s choice, as he strolls over to a table full of drugs, chops up some lines with his hoof, and goes to town. He then dies of a massive heart attack. A cautionary tale, to be sure. If you haven’t seen Bachelor Party and that joke strikes you as in particularly bad taste, you probably don’t need to track this movie down because it doesn’t get any classier.

However, for a generation of us, Bachelor Party was a late night sleepover classic. It was like The Hangover of the 1980s, albeit not as big of a hit. It’s the raciest movie Tom Hanks ever made, with him playing a young man about to be married (to the late Tawny Kitaen shortly before she became immortalized by Whitesnake), whose idiot friends throw him the bachelor party to end all bachelor parties. 

Bachelor Party came out just after Splash made Hanks a star, and given the family following he picked up for that movie, he opted to go a classier route in the future than Bachelor Party might have hinted at. Basically, rather than be the next Robert Carradine (star of Revenge of the Nerds) he became the beloved icon we know now. 

As such, Bachelor Party has become somewhat obscure in his filmography, but it’s worth noting that the film made money ($38 million in 1984) and was a staple on VHS and cable. It actually became popular again during the DVD era, with it even getting a DTV sequel no one watched, and almost ended up getting remade. Yet, in recent years, it’s become a frustratingly hard movie to find…unless you live in Canada. In the States, it doesn’t seem to be streaming anywhere, but in Canada, ironically enough, given the movie’s content, it’s actually streaming on Disney Plus. Yep – a movie where a donkey overdoses on cocaine is streaming on Disney Plus (thank God!). 

Like Ransom and Dutch, it doesn’t seem like there’s a specific agenda keeping Bachelor Party out of circulation. You can find plenty of DVD copies on Amazon even if they are out of print, as tons of them were manufactured during its second wave of popularity in the 2000s. Yet, it’s the kind of movie that’s begging for a special edition from a label like Arrow because it would be hilarious to reunite some of the movie’s stars, like Hanks and Michael Dudikoff (the American Ninja), who made his debut in this. It points to a problem, as like Dutch and Ransom, the rights are held by Disney (it was made by 20th Century Fox), who have bigger fish to fry. I get them not wanting to reissue a movie like Bachelor Party, but it would be nice if they were more aggressive in licensing their movies to indie labels, as I have to think a movie like Bachelor Party (or Johnny Dangerously) would sell well.

What do you think? Should Disney open the floodgates and release some MIA classics? Let us know in the comments! 

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