Development The script was written under the title
Edwards & Hunt. The screenwriters' agent, Rob Carlson, also represented
Steve Oedekerk, who was able to help the script circulate; it was ultimately purchased by Turner Pictures. Chris Farley was the first actor to be cast. The writers originally wanted to offer the role of Leslie Edwards to
Hugh Laurie; at that point, he was a star only in the United Kingdom, so Turner executives wished for a more recognizable actor. The role was turned down by
Hugh Grant and
Bill Murray before Matthew Perry accepted the part.
Filming The film had a budget of . Feeling that the humor of the story was in putting the goofball protagonists against a historical backdrop, the filmmakers opted for realism in the art design. Principal photography began in the summer of 1996. Four weeks were spent shooting in the Big Bear region of Northern California. A town representing St. Louis was constructed at Reading Island park on the Sacramento River, east of
Cottonwood, California, and a Native American village set was built upriver. Heat posed a major challenge for the summer shoot, with actors wearing furs in temperatures of over one hundred degrees. Filming was completed in the fall of 1996, with a 1997 release target. However, the film was delayed a full year due to the pending merger between
Turner and
Time Warner. Farley died on December 18, 1997, of a drug overdose. By the time the film was released in May 1998, Chris Farley had been dead nearly six months.
Post-production Writer Tom Wolfe (not the
author of the same name) stated that the script was intended to be more of an ensemble piece than the
buddy comedy the studio saw it as. Farley's assistant, Ted Dondanville, stated that in post-production, cuts were made around the star and targeted peripheral characters. He felt that the lost material would have helped Farley's performance. "They cut the ensemble scenes first, Matthew Perry's second, and Chris's never." A scene featuring Edwards' sweetheart, played by
Parker Posey, was cut, as was the film's original ending. The re-shot ending did not include Bokeem Woodbine, resulting in his character Jonah disappearing after the fight against the conquistadors. ==Reception==