The splendid ensemble cast inhabits these unglamorous roles with quiet gusto.
Last Orders (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:82
Fresh:64
Rotten:18
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: With a cast that includes some of the best acting talent in Britain, Last Orders is a rewarding character-driven ensemble piece.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $2,197,234
Synopsis: Fred Schepisi's adaptation of Graham Swift's prize-winning novel is a quietly graceful portrait of four working-class Brits, bound by years of friendship, that unites some of England's finest... Fred Schepisi's adaptation of Graham Swift's prize-winning novel is a quietly graceful portrait of four working-class Brits, bound by years of friendship, that unites some of England's finest actors in a powerful and deeply moving ensemble production. Michael Caine stars as Jack Dodd, the charismatic leader of the group, whose death and last wishes sends his friends on a nostalgic journey from London to Margate to scatter Jack's ashes in the sea. After forty years of warming the seats at their favorite pub, longtime friends and WWII veterans Ray (Bob Hoskins), Lenny (David Hemmings), and Vic (Tom Courtenay) are forced to face the loss of one of their own as they make the "epic" journey accompanied by Jack's flashy, prodigal son Vince (Ray Winstone). Noticeably absent from the group is Jack's long-suffering widow Amy (Helen Mirren), who travels to visit her autistic daughter instead of accompanying her husband's ashes, in a painful journey of her own which sheds light on her complex relationship with Jack. As the four men make their way to Margate, going from pub to pub, they reflect on a lifetime of memories of Jack, which are recreated in a series of multi-layered flashbacks that explore the delicate interweaving of their friendships; full of secrets, resentments, and deeply rooted loyalty. Schepisi masterfully handles the multidimensional plot lines while deftly allowing his talented cast to portray their flawed and profoundly ordinary characters. [More]
Starring: Michael Caine, Tom Courtenay, David Hemmings, Bob Hoskins
Starring: Michael Caine, Tom Courtenay, David Hemmings, Bob Hoskins, Ray Winstone, Helen Mirren
Director: Fred Schepisi
Director: Fred Schepisi
Screenwriter: Fred Schepisi
Producer: Nik Powell, Fred Schepisi
Composer: Paul Grabowsky
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Last Orders
An enervated, overly muted drama that should have been a lot livelier, considering the terrific cast.
Because I share history and memories with these actors, it is easy to stand at the bar with their characters as they regard the urn of ashes.
Finely crafted, admirably ambitious in design and fueled by uniformly delicious performances by its cast of old pros.
Like most trips to bountiful, end of the line pilgrimages make for winsomely plodding fare.
We come to love each and everyone of them so much that the arrival of the ending credits is the film's only disappointment.
The performers are so spot on, it is hard to conceive anyone else in their roles.
Just the sort of lazy tearjerker that gives movies about ordinary folk a bad name.
The storytelling may be ordinary, but the cast is one of those all-star reunions that fans of Gosford Park have come to assume is just another day of Brit cinema.
...is funny in the way that makes you ache with sadness (the way Chekhov is funny), profound without ever being self-important, warm without ever succumbing to sentimentality.
Schepisi successfully fashioned a tight and bittersweet two-hour script from Graham Swift's multi-character, Booker Prize-winning novel.
Schepisi, aided by a cast that seems to include every top-notch British actor who did not appear in Gosford Park (as well as one, Ms. Mirren, who did), has succeeded beyond all expectation.
A funny and touching film that is gorgeously acted by a British cast to rival Gosford Park's.
The carload of codgers in Fred Schepisi's Last Orders merely bellyache, philosophize, crack unfunny jokes, and ruminate simplemindedly about Death.
Latest News for Last Orders
June 24, 2005:
Lions Gate Digs Into "The Descent"
Neil Marshall, director of the resoundingly popular cult flick "Dog Soldiers," has struck a deal with Lions Gate to distribute his next movie in North America, says... More...
February 06, 2002:
Schepisi offers a brave and endearing account of four men grieving the loss of their best friend. ![]()
More...
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