Bulworth
Bulworth is a 1998 American political satire black comedy film co-written, co-produced, directed by, and starring Warren Beatty.[1] The plot follows Democratic U.S. Senator Jay Billington Bulworth (Beatty), a jaded incumbent facing financial collapse and re-election defeat, who arranges a hit on himself via a $10 million insurance policy, freeing him to abandon rehearsed campaign rhetoric for improvised, rhyming monologues that bluntly expose hypocrisies in political fundraising, media manipulation, racial welfare dependencies, and Hollywood cultural influences.[1][2] Co-starring Halle Berry as a campaign operative, Don Cheadle as a gang leader, and Oliver Platt as a rival aide, the film premiered at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival on May 15 before a limited U.S. theatrical release by 20th Century Fox.[1] Critically acclaimed for its provocative takedown of bipartisan corruption and prescient populism—anticipating anti-establishment sentiments in later elections—it earned Beatty an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay, the Los Angeles Film Critics Association award for the same, and a 76% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, though it grossed only $29.2 million worldwide against a $30 million budget and drew backlash for its unvarnished commentary on inner-city violence and Democratic Party pandering.[3][2][4][5]Synopsis
Plot Summary
Senator Jay Bulworth (Warren Beatty), a longtime Democratic U.S. Senator from California, trails significantly in polls during his 1996 reelection bid against a dynamic young challenger. Devastated by massive personal financial losses from failed stock speculations and alienated from a political system he views as corrupt and insincere, Bulworth arranges his own assassination through a hired intermediary, timing it for the conclusion of a final three-day Los Angeles campaign tour after secretly doubling his life insurance policy to yield $10 million for his teenage daughter, who relies on antidepressants for treatment.[6][1] Seeking relief from insomnia and anxiety, Bulworth consumes an overdose of phenobarbital sleeping pills mixed with vodka, resulting not in lethargy but a euphoric, uninhibited mania that compels him to voice unvarnished truths. At a scheduled appearance in a South Los Angeles black church, he discards scripted platitudes and improvises a rap decrying the Democratic Party's perennial neglect of black communities post-election, asserting that welfare policies perpetuate dependency rather than self-reliance, and controversially advising racial intermarriage avoidance to preserve group cohesion and political leverage.[6][2] Bulworth's erratic candor draws the attention of Nina (Halle Berry), a sharp, streetwise young black woman dispatched by neighborhood activists—led by figures like L. D. (Don Cheadle)—to extract concessions on local issues; their encounters evolve into mutual fascination and a budding romance, with Nina shadowing him amid escalating chaos. At an exclusive Beverly Hills fundraiser packed with Hollywood moguls and liberal donors, Bulworth excoriates the attendees for performative virtue while bankrolling politicians who safeguard their interests, spotlighting insurance industry contributions aimed at blocking mental health parity reforms that would raise costs, a sore point tied to his daughter's medication expenses. Assassins close in with botched attempts, including a drive-by shooting, prompting Bulworth to evade death and rediscover a zest for authenticity over suicide.[6][1][2] The narrative peaks during a live television debate, where Bulworth, clad in hip-hop attire, forsakes policy jargon for rhythmic verses exposing how both major parties serve corporate paymasters at voters' expense, galvanizing viewers and scandalizing handlers. Fleeing the studio with Nina, he crashes a house party in the hood, rallying revelers to bombard politicians with incessant demands for honesty until the establishment yields or collapses. The film ends on an ambiguous note: as Bulworth immerses in the crowd's energy, dancing intimately with Nina, a distant shot echoes, cutting to black without clarifying his survival, implying his transformative odyssey persists beyond the frame.[6][2]Production
Development and Writing
Warren Beatty conceived the idea for Bulworth in the early 1990s, pitching the project to 20th Century Fox in 1992 as a story about a depressed U.S. senator who hires a hitman to kill himself before deciding to speak unfiltered truths during his final campaign days.[7] The screenplay underwent development over the subsequent six years, a period marked by Beatty's own flirtations with a potential presidential run in 1999 and his observations of shifting Democratic Party dynamics under President Bill Clinton.[5] This timeline allowed the script to incorporate real-time political events, such as the 1996 welfare reform legislation, which Beatty viewed as emblematic of the party's drift toward centrism and away from traditional liberal commitments.[8] Beatty co-wrote the screenplay with Jeremy Pikser, a screenwriter known for political satires, drawing on Pikser's background in leftist activism and script consulting to refine the narrative's edge.[9] Their collaboration emphasized an insider's critique of Democratic hypocrisies, with Beatty leveraging his status as a longtime Hollywood Democrat to expose what he saw as the party's abandonment of core principles in favor of donor-driven pragmatism and identity politics.[5] The script earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay, reflecting its pointed satirical structure.[9] Early drafts evolved to incorporate rap sequences as a comedic and thematic device, enabling the protagonist's profane outbursts to bypass conventional political discourse and highlight absurdities in race-based pandering and media manipulation.[5] Beatty tested these elements by consulting hip-hop artists like Snoop Dogg to authenticate the style while amplifying the film's vehicle for unvarnished social commentary, though the approach drew mixed reactions for its tonal risks.[5] This innovation stemmed from Beatty's aim to satirize not just policy failures but the performative authenticity deficits in elite liberalism.[8]Casting and Pre-Production
Warren Beatty, who co-wrote, directed, and produced Bulworth, cast himself as the titular Senator Jay Billington Bulworth, capitalizing on his established reputation as a politically engaged figure in Hollywood to portray a jaded incumbent confronting systemic corruption.[10] The script, developed with co-writer Jeremy Pikser, originated from a 1992 concept Beatty pitched involving a suicidal politician, eventually greenlit by 20th Century Fox executive Joe Roth with a $30 million budget to support its independent sensibilities within a major studio framework.[1] This financing enabled pre-production efforts to prioritize authenticity in depicting campaign logistics and urban settings. Halle Berry was selected for the role of Nina, Bulworth's love interest and a skeptical activist from South Central Los Angeles, providing a narrative counterpoint to the senator's elite worldview through her grounded perspective on social inequities.[2] Don Cheadle played L.D., a pragmatic community leader navigating gang dynamics and political opportunism, while Oliver Platt portrayed Dennis Murphy, the frantic campaign aide; Beatty crafted Platt's part specifically because he admired the actor's inherent humor, aligning with the film's need for satirical bite in operational scenes.[11] Pre-production emphasized location scouting in Los Angeles, particularly South Central neighborhoods for church and street sequences that underscored the story's racial and welfare critiques, requiring coordination with local authorities to access authentic venues amid heightened post-Rodney King tensions.[12] Casting calls targeted performers with versatility for blending rapid-fire political rhetoric and improvisational comedy, ensuring the ensemble could sustain the film's irreverent tone without veering into caricature.Filming and Post-Production
Principal photography for Bulworth occurred in 1997, with principal locations in Los Angeles, including South Central neighborhoods to evoke urban grit. Cinematographer Vittorio Storaro, ASC, AIC, shot using Arriflex cameras fitted with Panavision lenses, prioritizing available light to preserve naturalistic realism in both indoor political gatherings and outdoor rallies: "We tried to use as much available light as possible."[13] Handheld camera techniques were employed to convey chaotic energy in crowd and rally sequences, mirroring the protagonist's unraveling campaign frenzy. Complementing this, Steadicam rigs provided fluid, immersive movements in dynamic rally scenes, operated by inventor Garrett Brown and his son Jonathan, who together exposed over 800 rolls of film across multiple setups. This dual-camera approach allowed for efficient coverage in unpredictable environments, contributing to the film's visceral satirical style without compromising stability.[14][15] Visual motifs emphasized contrasts between the sterile formality of elite fundraising events and the raw vibrancy of decaying urban settings, achieved through Storaro's expressive lighting and composition to underscore political disconnection. In post-production, editors applied quick cuts and rhythmic pacing to intensify the improvisational feel of the senator's blunt speeches and rap sequences, heightening the overall comedic bite and thematic urgency.[13] Beatty's simultaneous duties as director and star necessitated a compressed shooting schedule amid perfectionist oversight, with Storaro noting the demands of reconciling Beatty's vision for unpolished authenticity against technical precision in a narrative blending scripted dialogue with spontaneous-like outbursts.[13]Themes and Political Analysis
Critique of Political Hypocrisy and Incentives
The film Bulworth portrays Senator Jay Bulworth's reelection campaign as emblematic of how self-preservation incentives compel politicians to deliver insincere promises tailored to donor and voter expectations, rather than principled governance.[16] Facing financial distress and polling deficits, Bulworth initially adheres to scripted platitudes funded by special interests, including insurance industry contributions exceeding $1 million in real-world analogs from the 1990s, which the film depicts as quid pro quo arrangements shaping policy on healthcare and regulation.[17] This dynamic underscores a causal mechanism where reelection dependency fosters hypocrisy: politicians abandon stated values to secure funding, as Bulworth's aides manage donor access while suppressing his growing disillusionment.[18] Bulworth's subsequent breakdown—triggered by a failed assassination plot and psychotropic drugs—exposes these incentives through unscripted rants, revealing campaign finance as the core corruptor that distorts policy toward special interests over constituent needs.[19] He articulates how welfare programs, for instance, function less as genuine aid and more as mechanisms for vote aggregation, sustained by taxpayer funds to maintain electoral coalitions without addressing underlying economic disincentives to self-reliance.[20] This critique aligns with first-principles observation that rational actors in competitive electoral systems prioritize survival via pandering, a realism the film privileges over ideological facades of altruism, as evidenced by Bulworth's blunt admission that "every senator has a price."[21] The portrayal draws empirical resonance from 1990s scandals, such as the 1996 presidential campaign's acceptance of over $2.8 million in improper foreign donations funneled through intermediaries, which highlighted how lax finance rules enabled donor influence without overt bribery.[22] By contrasting Bulworth's pre-crisis pragmatism with his post-breakdown candor, the film challenges the realpolitik normalization of such hypocrisy, positioning unvarnished honesty as a disruptive force against entrenched incentives.[5] Director Warren Beatty, who wrote and starred, frames this arc to critique how "compassionate" rhetoric masks self-interested bargaining, with Bulworth's rally improvisations—dismissing partisan loyalty for transactional truths—illustrating the status quo's fragility when incentives are openly dissected.[17] Unlike reformist narratives that attribute corruption solely to external loopholes, Bulworth emphasizes internal human incentives, suggesting that without countervailing pressures like term limits or public financing, hypocrisy persists as the efficient equilibrium for incumbents navigating donor-driven primaries and general elections.[23] This perspective anticipates later populist disruptions by demonstrating how evading special-interest capture through authenticity can rally alienated voters, though at the risk of institutional backlash.[19]Race, Welfare, and Social Policies
In the film, Senator Bulworth critiques welfare programs for fostering dependency cycles, asserting that they subsidize single motherhood and urban poverty more generously than low-wage work or intact families, thereby disincentivizing self-reliance.[24] This portrayal aligns with analyses showing that Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), the pre-1996 welfare framework, imposed effective marginal tax rates exceeding 100% on additional earnings due to benefit cliffs, reducing labor participation among single mothers.[25] Empirical data indicate that such policies correlated with rising single motherhood rates, from approximately 20% of black births out-of-wedlock in the early 1960s to over 70% by the 1990s, coinciding with welfare expansions that provided viable alternatives to marriage.[26] [27] Bulworth's interactions with black activists underscore hustling for grants and political patronage over addressing root causes like family disintegration, portraying community leaders as entrenched in dependency-enabling networks rather than pursuing structural reforms.[28] The 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), which imposed time limits and work requirements, subsequently halved welfare caseloads and boosted single-mother employment by 10-15 percentage points, suggesting prior systems had indeed perpetuated idleness and poverty traps in urban areas where over 25% of households remained below the poverty line amid high welfare penetration.[29] [30] The senator's most taboo-breaking proposition frames racism as a product of distinct racial groups' biological incentives for in-group preference, proposing that "procreative racial deconstruction"—widespread interracial reproduction—would homogenize populations into a single shade, eroding tribal animosities through genetic uniformity rather than enforced tolerance.[31] This contrarian view challenges sentimental multiculturalism by invoking evolutionary psychology's emphasis on kinship selection, where phenotypic similarity drives cooperation, though it overlooks potential cultural persistence in mixed descendants.[32] While Bulworth hints at optimism through vignettes of grassroots resilience in black neighborhoods, the narrative subordinates such elements to causal accountability, attributing persistent racial disparities more to policy distortions—like welfare's erosion of paternal investment—than to irreducible systemic barriers, consistent with longitudinal data linking family structure to outcomes over aggregate socioeconomic controls.[33] Counterarguments from progressive sources posit cultural or discriminatory factors as primary, yet these often underweight econometric evidence of welfare's independent role in fertility and marriage decisions across demographics.[34]Media, Hollywood, and Elite Liberalism
In Bulworth, a pivotal fundraiser scene depicts Senator Jay Bulworth addressing wealthy Hollywood donors, where he abandons prepared remarks to rap about the entertainment industry's exploitation of minority talent through stereotypical roles and profit-driven content, despite the attendees' public advocacy for social justice causes.[10] This sequence satirizes the donors' superficial progressivism, portraying them as insulated participants in a system that commodifies the very communities they claim to champion, highlighting a disconnect between professed ideals and economic self-interest.[35] The film's portrayal of media institutions amplifies this critique by showing how broadcast networks enable performative political theater, as when Bulworth's unscripted outbursts during a televised debate expose the rigidity of moderated formats designed to favor equivocation over candor.[5] Network coverage subsequently frames his remarks as erratic rather than revelatory, underscoring a bias toward maintaining elite consensus and marginalizing challenges to status quo narratives.[36] Warren Beatty, embodying Bulworth as an archetype of the aging liberal establishment, infuses the character with self-reflective irony drawn from his own career as a Hollywood insider and Democratic supporter, critiquing the genre's tendency toward abstracted virtue-signaling untethered from grassroots impacts.[37] This insulation, the satire implies, perpetuates ineffective policies by shielding proponents from direct accountability, as elites advocate interventions whose costs—such as disrupted communities or fiscal burdens—fall disproportionately on non-insulated populations.Cast and Performances
Principal Actors
Warren Beatty stars as Senator Jay Billington Bulworth, a weary Democratic incumbent facing reelection in 1998 who, after overdosing on barbiturates and contracting his own murder, transitions from suicidal despair to candid outbursts, including rapping political critiques at events like a South Central block party and a black church service.[1] [6] His portrayal features extended monologues, such as a tirade against welfare incentives during a community speech, and physical sequences involving hip-hop dancing amid crowds.[38] [39] Halle Berry portrays Nina, an activist and mother from a South Los Angeles neighborhood who encounters Bulworth at a campaign stop and later accompanies him, disclosing her indirect involvement in the assassination scheme to fund her brother's release from jail.[6] [39] She serves as a conduit for Bulworth's immersion in grassroots perspectives, guiding him through local scenes and challenging his views on race and policy in direct exchanges.[6] Don Cheadle plays L.D., Bulworth's campaign manager and confidant, who manages logistical fallout from the senator's unscripted rants while handling donor relations and security amid escalating chaos.[40] [41] L.D. appears in operational scenes, coordinating responses to Bulworth's deviations from prepared speeches and navigating alliances with party insiders.[39]Supporting Roles and Character Functions
Oliver Platt portrays Dennis Murphy, Senator Bulworth's campaign manager and chief of staff, who embodies the frantic loyalty of political operatives scrambling to contain their candidate's self-destructive outbursts.[41][42] Murphy's repeated pleas and logistical interventions underscore the film's satire of bureaucratic incentives, where aides prioritize damage control and poll numbers over substantive policy, highlighting the tension between scripted conformity and unvarnished truth-telling.[43] Paul Sorvino plays Graham Crockett, a lobbyist for the insurance industry whose interactions with Bulworth expose the quid pro quo dynamics of Washington influence peddling.[1][41] Crockett represents entrenched corporate power, serving as a narrative foil that amplifies Bulworth's critique of how special interests distort democratic processes through financial leverage and access.[42] Supporting ensemble characters, including black community activists and Hollywood donors, function primarily as collective archetypes in key group scenes, such as chaotic fundraisers and rallies, where Bulworth's improvisational rants provoke collective outrage or discomfort.[44] These figures illustrate factional self-interest—activists demanding preferential welfare policies, donors expecting ideological alignment for contributions—contrasting Bulworth's disruptive honesty and satirizing how identity and economic groups perpetuate hypocritical alliances in pursuit of targeted gains.[45] Their reactions drive plot momentum by escalating the senator's isolation, emphasizing causal pressures like reelection funding and constituency appeasement that sustain political theater.[23]Music and Soundtrack
Rap Sequences and Original Songs
The rap sequences in Bulworth represent a core satirical mechanism, with Senator Jay Bulworth (Warren Beatty) abandoning scripted speeches for freestyle-style raps that expose hypocrisies in American politics and society. These sequences were integrated into the screenplay co-written by Beatty and Jeremy Pikser, who crafted the lyrics to reflect the character's descent into unfiltered candor following his suicidal contract on himself. Performed by Beatty during principal photography in real-time crowd scenes, the raps used on-set hip-hop beats played via portable equipment to simulate live improvisation, heightening the film's raw, confrontational energy.[46][47] Key original songs include the "Bulworth Rap," delivered at a Beverly Hills fundraiser and a South Central church event on June 1998 production dates, where lyrics deride welfare dependency—evoking the "welfare queens" stereotype popularized in 1970s political rhetoric—and question forced racial integration's outcomes, asserting that "everybody just gotta keep skeedaddlin'" to avoid societal collapse from miscegenation and cultural dilution. Other sequences, like the rap at a hip-hop club, amplify critiques of Democratic incentives trapping black communities in poverty cycles, with lines decrying "lazy, welfare-taking" behaviors intertwined with drug culture and absent family structures. These lyrics draw from first-hand script research into urban policy failures, prioritizing causal links between incentives and outcomes over sanitized narratives.[46] Ennio Morricone's original score, recorded in 1997 sessions aware of the film's hip-hop pivot, fuses orchestral motifs with rhythmic hip-hop percussion and bass elements to underscore tonal shifts during rap deliveries, such as transitioning from tense intrigue cues to pulsating beats in urban confrontations. This hybrid approach, atypical for Morricone's oeuvre, supports the satire by juxtaposing classical tension with street-level aggression, evident in tracks like the "Bulworth Suite" featuring muted brass and synth grooves echoing rap cadences.[48][49] Production emphasized authenticity in hip-hop integration for urban sequences filmed in Los Angeles' South Central and Crenshaw districts, involving consultations with West Coast artists to calibrate beats and slang. The soundtrack's original contributions, including a Dr. Dre-LL Cool J collaboration on "Zoom" and Pras Michel with Wu-Tang Clan's Ol' Dirty Bastard on "Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You Are)," were developed in tandem with rap scenes to mirror real club atmospheres, ensuring cultural verisimilitude amid the satire's edge.[50][51]Composer's Role and Influences
Ennio Morricone served as composer, arranger, and conductor for the original score of Bulworth, recorded on January 18, 1998, at Forum Music Village in Rome using the Accademia Musicale Italiana orchestra.[52] The resulting work, released on CD by RCA Victor in 1998, consists of two extended suites exceeding 40 minutes in total: "Suite One: Bulworth Part 1" (17:58) and "Suite Two: Bulworth Part 2" (24:41), featuring orchestral instrumentation including strings, piano, horns, and guitar, augmented by vocals from Amii Stewart and Edda Dell'Orso in select passages.[53][52] Morricone's score adopts an eclectic approach, integrating orchestral foundations with jazz and hip-hop influences alongside motifs evoking spaghetti westerns and the militaristic march from The Untouchables.[53] These elements generate ironic dissonance, contrasting the film's political satire; for instance, the bittersweet adagio of Suite One conveys the senator's existential angst through melancholic and atonal developments, while Suite Two's staccato rhythms and chase-like motifs amplify suspense in sequences depicting assassination threats.[53] In post-production, portions of the score were edited from shorter cues into these suites and synchronized to the film's action, though much was supplanted by licensed hip-hop tracks to align with the narrative's immersion in 1990s gangsta rap aesthetics, heightening the cultural irony of a white politician adopting street vernacular.[53] This blending reflects Morricone's adaptability, drawing on contemporary urban sounds to underscore thematic tensions without diluting his signature orchestral voice.[53]Reception and Commercial Performance
Critical Reviews
Bulworth received generally favorable reviews from critics upon its release on May 15, 1998, with an aggregate score of 76% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 68 reviews, indicating a consensus that praised its satirical boldness despite uneven execution.[2] On Metacritic, it scored 75 out of 100 from 28 critics, reflecting broad approval for its provocative take on political hypocrisy.[54] Reviewers highlighted the film's daring critique of campaign finance, media influence, and partisan incentives, often crediting Warren Beatty's performance and direction for infusing the narrative with raw energy.[39] Roger Ebert awarded the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, commending its ability to provoke laughter alongside serious commentary on political spin and discontent, likening it to films like Network for blending humor with frustration over public discourse.[6] He praised Beatty's portrayal of a disillusioned senator's unfiltered rants as a liberating force that exposed systemic absurdities, though Ebert noted the satire's reliance on black culture as a repository of truth felt like a clichéd convention.[6] Similarly, Variety described Bulworth as an "infectiously giddy" black comedy that risked provocation through its droll examination of electoral cynicism.[39] Critics frequently pointed to flaws in pacing and tonal consistency, with Ebert criticizing the film's messiness from ambitious risks, including an unconvincing romantic subplot that distracted from the core satire.[6] The New York Times review acknowledged the "homeboy" transformation as a bold but potentially gimmicky device, executed with wit yet risking superficiality in its handling of racial dynamics and interracial elements.[55] Extended rap sequences drew mixed reactions, lauded for their audacious candor on topics like welfare dependencies and elite liberalism but faulted for dragging the narrative and amplifying uneven shifts between farce and earnestness.[6][55] While mainstream outlets like the New York Times noted potential insensitivity in the film's blunt depictions of race and class, appreciating the satirical edge without outright condemnation, the work's anti-establishment frankness resonated with those valuing unvarnished political critique over polished restraint.[55] This candor, including critiques of interest-group pandering, aligned with broader acclaim for challenging politically sanitized discourse, though some reviewers questioned whether the execution fully sustained its provocative thesis amid stylistic indulgences.[39][6]Box Office and Audience Response
Bulworth was released in the United States on May 15, 1998, by 20th Century Fox, with a reported production budget of $30 million.[1] The film opened modestly, earning $141,816 in its first weekend across two theaters, before expanding to a wider release.[1] Domestically, it grossed $26.5 million, while its worldwide total reached $29.2 million, resulting in a financial loss as it failed to recover its costs through theatrical earnings alone.[56][57] International performance was particularly weak, contributing only about $2.7 million to the total, underscoring the film's limited appeal beyond the U.S. market.[57] Audience reception proved polarized, with the film's blunt satire on race, welfare, and political hypocrisy alienating segments of potential viewers.[58] Reports highlighted underperformance among black audiences, despite featuring prominent actors like Halle Berry, attributing this to discomfort with the movie's unvarnished depictions of inner-city life and stereotypes in its comedic sequences.[58] The R rating, driven by profanity, drug references, and mature themes, further restricted its draw to broader family or mainstream crowds, confining success to niche urban and politically engaged demographics.[1] This tepid response, compounded by restrained marketing as a Beatty-directed passion project rather than a wide-appeal comedy, hampered word-of-mouth momentum during its theatrical run.[4]Awards and Nominations
Bulworth earned recognition primarily for its screenplay, reflecting acclaim for its satirical script amid limited broader awards success. The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay (written by Warren Beatty and Jeremy Pikser) at the 71st ceremony on March 21, 1999.[3] It was also nominated for three Golden Globe Awards in 1999: Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy (Beatty), and Best Screenplay – Motion Picture (Beatty).[59] The film secured one win at the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards in 1998 for Best Screenplay (Beatty and Pikser), highlighting peer appreciation for its incisive political commentary.[60] Additional nominations included Best Screenplay from the Chicago Film Critics Association in 1999 and the Writers Guild of America in 1999.[3]| Award | Year | Category | Nominee(s) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards | 1999 | Best Original Screenplay | Warren Beatty, Jeremy Pikser | Nominated[3] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1999 | Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy | Bulworth | Nominated[59] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1999 | Best Actor – Musical or Comedy | Warren Beatty | Nominated[3] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1999 | Best Screenplay – Motion Picture | Warren Beatty | Nominated[59] |
| Los Angeles Film Critics Association | 1998 | Best Screenplay | Warren Beatty, Jeremy Pikser | Won[60] |
| Chicago Film Critics Association | 1999 | Best Screenplay | Warren Beatty | Nominated[3] |