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6.4/10
IMDbBest Original Song Motion Picture | 2002 | Sting
Best Music Original Song | 2002 | Sting
Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical | 2002 | Hugh
Best Song | 2002 | Sting
Best Music Original Song | 2002 | Sting
Best Original Song Written for a Film | 2002 | Sting
Budget 48,000,000 USD
Box Office Collection 76,019,048 USD
Hugh Jackman took etiquette lessons from 19th-century etiquette expert Jane Gibson (who trained actors for such projects as Sense and Sensibility (1995)). He also studied ballroom dancing and trained to ride a horse for the film.
According to the DVD commentary, several of the film's actual crew members appear in the crew of the margarine commercial.
When Meg Ryan knew that Hugh Jackman was going to spend his wedding anniversary alone, she phoned his wife to invite her to dinner. Reportedly, Jackman had to spend the day working.
When Leopold is chasing Stuart down the stairs and out of his house, Stuart seems to jump a few meters in a second. In the "Director's Cut" version, the two guys actually bump into Kate there.
There are 2 different versions of this movie available on the DVD menu. One is the theatrical version which runs for 113 minutes where the other one is a directors cut which is 7 minutes longer than the original version. The only differences between the two is Kate can be seen in 1876 at the very beginning as well as a surprise cameo by James Mangold at a movie conference. There is also the implication that Kate is a distant relation to Stuart.
"Stuart: It is no more crazy than a dog finding a rainbow. Dogs are colourblind, Gretchen. They don't see colour. Just like we don't see time. We can feel it, we can feel it passing, but we can't see it. It's just like a blur. It's like we're riding in a supersonic train and the world is just blowing by, but imagine if we could stop that train, eh, Gretchen? Imagine if we could stop that train, get out, look around, and see time for what it really is? A universe, a world, a thing as unimaginable as colour to a dog, and as real, as tangible as that chair you're sitting in. Now if we could see it like that, really look at it, then maybe we could see the flaws as well as the form. And that's it; it's that simple. That's all I discovered. I'm just a... a guy who saw a crack in a chair that no one else could see. I'm that dog who saw a rainbow, only none of the other dogs believed me. Gretchen: I believe you."
"[Talking to himself] Leopold: Ah Miss Blaine, you dance like a herd of cattle. You are a rare woman who lights up a room simply by leaving it!"