Last Orders
Cast :Michael Caine, Bob Hoskins
Director :Fred Schepisi
Studio :Columbia Tri-Star
Format :Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
Released Date :January 01, 2001
DVD Released Date :August 13, 2002
Language :English (Dubbed), French (Subtitled), English (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled)
Audience Rating :R (Restricted)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateJune 13, 2005
SummaryPoignant film!
Content
This is a chamber work picture. There are not great stages and sumptuous locations, but it obeys a final request of a beloved friend; a leader between his friends and his intimate circle. All of we are in doubt with him because somehow he contributed to make them see the other side of the life, he shared with them triumphs and defeats; laughs and tears. We will watch countless ellipsis in different stages of his life: From the happy memories with his wife: the lovely Helen Mirren, his war stage in which he knew one of his more estimate friends, the birth of June and then the other birth conceived while he was in The War Front. But the love he had for his wife overcame the jealous to this last stage: the painful sickness and the last favor. To take his ashes to his beloved dock. All through the journey we can not forget two closed films around the friendship: An Italian film directed by Mario Monicelli named My friends and other Italian picture directed by Ettore Scola "Cerovamo tanto amati" ( We loved so much).
Anyway, a happy acknowledgement for Shepisi who directed this film with arresting inspiration. Canterbury Cathedral is true post card and a feast for your eyes.
Overwhelimg cast. Hopkins, Caine, Mirren and Couternay shine over the rest.


Rating
DateMay 02, 2005
SummaryAn Emotional Pilgrimage into the Past
Content
LAST ORDERS is the story of one man's life as told through the lives and stories of those who knew him best. The cast in this film is absolutely terrific and the cinematography is gorgeous. The lighting alone makes LAST ORDERS pleasing to look at. Had I judged LAST ORDERS by the first hour, however, I would have been sadly disappointed. The film takes quite a long time to get going, but once it does, it becomes something rather touching and memorable.

The plotline is one that will be familiar to most audiences. Four gentlemen are brought together to carry out their friend's (Michael Caine) dying wish: to have his ashes scattered off the Margate Pier into the ocean. The first hour of the film is a bit disorienting, as the audience has not a clue who these characters are. But little by little, we begin to piece together the seemingly dead and anaesthetized present by examining the rich and vibrant past (aided by drastic color and lighting changes). Inevitably, these old friends begin taking side trips, delaying their task more and more. The time provides them not only a moment to reflect on their lost friend, but also on their lives, lives that have gone by so quickly with much left unsaid. In fact, one of their detours is to visit Canterbury, rendering the end of the film into a bit of a pilgrimage of its own.

As LAST ORDER continues on into its second hour, the emotional impact of the film heightens and several of the scenes are rather heart-wrenching. This is not the story of a perfect man gone before his time. It is the story about an ordinary man and those who loved him, their faults, their desires, and their collective journey along a small road in life. I highly recommend it for a rainy, Sunday afternoon.

Rating
DateSeptember 30, 2004
Summary"Four geezers and a box."
Content
Three friends who have known Jack Dodds, a butcher, for almost fifty years, along with Jack's son Vince, meet at their local South London pub carrying a box containing Jack's ashes. Jack (Michael Caine) has died of heart failure, leaving a last request--that his ashes be cast off the Margate pier, several hours to the south of London. Ray (Bob Hoskins), a gambler; Vic (Tom Courtenay), an undertaker; Lenny (David Hemmings), a former prizefighter and heavy drinker; and Vince (Ray Winstone), Jack's son, a car dealer, set off for Margate in a Mercedes Benz that Vince has borrowed to honor the occasion.

As the men drive south, they reminisce about Jack, joke around, sing songs, irritate each other, and even threaten each other in the emotion of the moment. Director Fred Schepesi, who adapted the screenplay from the Booker Prize-winning novel by Graham Swift, alternates present scenes from the car with ironic scenes from Jack's life in the past, contrasting the deadness of the present trip to Margate with the liveliness of the past, showing the relationships among the various characters. Jack's wife Amy (Helen Mirren) has chosen not to come with them for the "ceremony." She is making her weekly visit to their mentally handicapped daughter June, now fifty, whom Jack has never accepted.

The nature of each man's relationship with Jack, with spouses and children, and with each other during World War II and after are all presented in flashback--from Vince's affair with Lenny's daughter, to Ray's relationship with Amy, and Jack's last minute bet with Ray to pay off a debt. As the men's relationships evolve onscreen, the viewer recognizes that these are the kinds of relationships that ordinary men spend their lives developing. The viewer comes to know not only Jack, but also the four men in the car heading south to scatter his ashes, and on a larger, universal scale, other men who have shared long friendships, jokes, and common experiences .

It is a tribute to the cinematography (Brian Trufano) that I didn't really notice it until the film was over--so apropos to the action and thematic development that it never called attention to itself. The original music (Paul Grabowsky) sets the scene at the beginning of the film but does not intrude on the character development or the interior action thoughout the film. The sensational cast in this wonderful ensemble drama, the sensitive directing, the fully developed themes, and the overwhelming feeling that these characters and situations are real make this one of the best films I've seen in ages. Mary Whipple

Rating
DateSeptember 18, 2004
SummaryA film worthy of the cast
Content
Not only is the film bittersweet, but so is the watching of it for me. I've derived so much pleasure over the years from several of this excellent cast in superior films. Back to the early 1970s when Helen Mirren was a sassy girl in "O Lucky Man," and later when she and Bob Hoskins were perfectly matched in "The Long Good Friday." Hoskins went on to other sterling work in "The Dunera Boys" and "The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearn," and Mirren to fame and excellence in such as "The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover."

Way back, I go, with Tom Courtenay in "Billy Liar," and through to his stunning and heartbreaking performance in "The Dresser." Michael Caine in so many things, of course, not the least of which was "Educating Rita." This is a good film, filled with pathos and tenderness. Thank goodness it is good enough to deserve a cast of this caliber. I hope it stimulates viewers to revisit some of their even greater works, as well as to make "Last Orders" part of their collections.

Rating
DateJuly 05, 2004
SummaryPleasing visit down memory lane......
Content
Looking for a sentimental Brit flick that leaves you feeling good? Try LAST ORDERS with a stellar ensemble of favorite actors- Michael Caine, Helen Mirran, Bob Hoskins, David Hemmings and Tom Courtenay. My husband and I thoroughly enjoyed this tale of old friends who travel from their favorite pub in London to the Margate Pier to scatter the ashes of one of their group, Jack, who has made the request his `last orders' (phrase used when the bar is closing). Using flashbacks, the Fred Schepisi, director of SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION, weaves a wonderful tale of one man's life as seen through the eyes of the friends and family who loved him.

Jack Dodd (Michale Caine) and Abby (Helen Mirran) were married for over 50 years. One of Jack's friends (Bob Hoskins) is a buddy from his WWII days who made his fortune playing the horses. Another (David Hemmings), is an ex-prize fighter. Yet another (Tom Cortenay), is an undertaker who began his career of tending to the dead during the war. Their son (Ray Winstone) is a successful Mercedes-Benz dealer who makes a good deal more money than his dad who never recovered from the fact his son would not join him in the family meat business.

On the trip to Margate Pier, each friend and family member recalls Jack, whose ashes are to be taken to the seaside place he and Abby visited years earlier. Each of them remembers a charming vignette that took place with Jack in London, southern England (Kent County) and/or the Middle East at some point during the last 50 years of the 20th century. This film is a must for the dedicated Anglophile and those nostalgic for past times. The transfer of the film is excellent and the beautiful shots include visits to a WWII memorial in Kent, Canterbury Cathedral, and Margate Pier which is really a sort of paved boardwalk ("the jetty washed away years ago").

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