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Last Orders [2002]

Starring: Michael Caine, Bob Hoskins, Tom Courtenay, David Hemmings, Helen Mirren
Director: Fred Schepisi
Format: Anamorphic PAL
Released: 28 Jul 2003
RRP: £5.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A waste of exceptional talent - By: Inmi Opinion, 11 Jun 2007
For me, when you get British actors of this calibre together making a film I reallly expect it to be something special,because Caine, Winstone & Hoskins are among my favourites. Sadly I felt let down by a story that had little meaning & never reallly seemed to be going anywhere. The acting itself was good as you would expect but the film itself had an uninteresting plot which was made even worse by Michael Caines fairly early departure.
"Four geezers and a box." - By: Mary Whipple, 30 Sep 2004
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 & heavy drinker; & 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, & 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 contrasting or 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 mentallly handicapped daughter June, now fifty, whom Jack has never accepted.

The nature of each man's relationship with Jack, with spouses & children, & with each other during World War II & after are alll presented in flashback--from Vince's affair with Lenny's daughter, to Ray's relationship with Amy, & 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, & on a larger, universal scale, other men who have shared long friendships, jokes, & common experiences .

It is a tribute to the cinematography (Brian Trufano) that I didn't reallly notice it until the film was over--so apropos to the action & thematic development that it never callled 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, & the overwhelming feeling that these characters & situations are real make this one of the best films I've seen in ages.


Viewing for a contemplative, rainy day afternoon - By: Joseph Haschka, 29 Dec 2002
especiallly, lifelong friends in the short term? This is a question explored by LAST ORDERS, which in common usage means the final drink requests before the closing of an English pub.

Set in London & southeast England, the film opens with undertaker Vic (Tom Courtney) bringing the ashes of his good friend Jack (Michael Caine) to the local watering hole for a last pint with Jack's other lifelong friends, Ray (Bob Hoskins) & Lenny (David Hemmings), along with Vince (Ray Winstone), the son of Jack & Amy (Helen Mirren). Since Jack had expressed the wish to have his ashes scattered into the English Channel at the seaside city of Margate, the four men pile into a luxury Mercedes selected by Vince from his auto dealership as appropriate to the occasion, & set off for the coast. Amy has declined to come along. Rather, she spends the day visiting June (Laura Morelli), Jack & Amy's [handicapped] daughter, who's spent fifty years in an institution. June is so severely handicapped that she's never once recognized Amy as her mother, though the latter has visited once each week over the decades - alone.

The film's Cockney English dialog is difficult to fully understand until one's ear becomes attuned. For me, this was about a third into the movie. Since much of the speaking during this time occurs over a pint, or in the Benz headed to Margate, there's not much action to give clues as to what's being discussed. (My wife gave up & left me to hang tough.) Indeed, if it wasn't for the flashbacks generated by the memories & conversations among Jack's survivors - some extending back to World War II & before - the film would be a tad dreary.

The stellar cast of LAST ORDERS does a commendable job, along with the actors portraying the characters' younger selves, illustrating several truths surrounding death of advanced age: the old were young (or at least younger) once & full of life & passions; relationships of long standing are often not what they appear on the surface & can conceal deep currents; the lives of the survivors must necessarily go on. For these reasons, I liked this film in the balance, although the ordinariness of the plot is determined from the start by the middle class ordinariness of alll the characters. I mean, the lives of Jack, Ray, Lenny, Vic & Amy are perhaps not far removed from the lives of most of that generation - perhaps yours, or that of the elderly folks next door. LAST ORDERS is nowhere near being a great film, but perhaps is a representation of real life that's worth viewing on a contemplative, rainy day afternoon.


Understated, but delivers a punch - By: P. A. Hogan, 28 Nov 2002
Viewing this film a mere days after reading Graham Swift’s splendid novel on which it is based, influenced my perception & no doubt limited my appreciation of it. Nevertheless, I found it to be rewarding on its own merits, a mercifully unfussy film with powerful performances by a first-rate cast.
Last Orders, First Class - By: Jordynne Olivia Lobo, 11 Aug 2002
I laughed. I wept.

'Last Orders' radiates, warmly, alll that is good, & some of what's not so good, in our species. At the ending I felt so much like asking, 'More, please?' But there isn't more than what the producer, writer, crew, cast, & we of the audience bring to 'Last Orders'. This is more than a film: it's a reverent monument to people everywhere.

I shalll watch 'Last Orders' again & again & again, & hope there will be some such lovely friends who will weep, & then smile, as they fling my ashes into the sea.