The Last Day

2004
The Last Day
6| 1h45m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 29 May 2005 Released
Producted By: Canal+
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Synopsis

At Christmas time, 19 year old Simon returns home to visit his dysfunctional family with Louise, a fearless girl he met during his train ride. While Simon struggles to cope with the growing distance between him and his parents, he starts to examine his feelings when Louise develop a liaison of her own with his childhood friend Mathieu.

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Benedict_Cumberbatch Young writer-director Rodolphe Marconi introduces us to 18 year-old Simon (the extremely handsome and talented Gaspard Ulliel, "A Very Long Engagement"), who brings a girl he just met on a train, Louise (Mélanie Laurent), along with him to visit his parents and sister for a holiday in the country. As the mysterious Mathieu (Thibault Vinçon), Simon's unrequited love, reappears, Louise and Mathieu develop a liaison of their own, and we contemplate Simon's morbid sadness as dark secrets are uncovered."The Last Day" is a very personal, slow-paced, sensual and tragic story. It's very French in its aesthetics (which I love) and mood, and Marconi owes great part of his film's power to the amazing talent of Ulliel, who says more with a single look than most of today's young actors with a thousand words. In spite of his first bad move in Hollywood with "Hannibal Rising", I believe Ulliel is destined to become an international star (and if he doesn't, that's also fine, as long as he keeps picking daring roles in great films in his homeland). The soundtrack is also eclectic and memorable, and Marconi even reserves "the improvised, sudden musical scene" that's a trademark of some contemporary French directors, like François Ozon and Christophe Honoré. It could seem out of place and even ridiculous, but works beautifully here. Not a film for everybody, and ultimately depressing; but a memorable, poignant experience nonetheless. 9/10.
arizona-philm-phan I really like the following description of main character, Simon, found at another web site----"Simon is a sensitive, private, lonely, broken, and tormented soul." We are introduced to S. during his travel home for a holiday visit, travel during which he meets another young voyager (Louise), who he winds up inviting into his home. Somewhat surprisingly we find it is not upon Louise that Simon's thoughts dwell, but rather on boyhood companion (and likely more), Mathieu. Something of their earlier (most likely sexual) relationship is alluded to during Simon's visit to a local lighthouse and his conversation with Mathieu, who is its keeper. While he might have been hoping for some sort of rekindling, it soon becomes apparent to Simon, and to us, that M. is moving on as concerns his relationship preferences (yes, he likely enjoys the wild kiss he initiates with S.---at Louise's urging---but not enough to change his current course). Louise is now his focus, something that becomes 'majorly' upsetting to S.If you require further proof of Simon's true feelings, you need only view the late-in-the-film scene in which S. enters Mathieu's quarters (when M. is away), makes his way to the bed, lies in it, eyes closed, holding the bedclothes, then the pillow, to his nose and deeply breathes in Mathieu's scent. While doing this, he is moved to initiate his own self-gratification. A tremendously sexy scene---I kept hoping Mathieu would appear in the doorway, but obviously other things were afoot.Mother, Marie's, startling disclosure near film's conclusion, concerning one of the major relationships in Simon's life, results in an ending you are unlikely to soon forget.PS--Much of this script is a little slow moving and, sometimes, repetitive. My 6 awarded Stars are aimed, primarily, at Ulliel's acting as Simon, but also at Garcia's as mother. I won't be throwing this out of my DVD collection, but likely will not be viewing it often.****SOME LATER-IN-TIME THOUGHTS (A POSTMORTEM, IF YOU WILL)(May, 2007)---Following young (late teens) Simon as the film begins, and later meeting those who make up the short arc of his life, we begin our study of a most fragile existence. Almost immediately we're given Louise. "Learning" about this young (past mid-teens) girl who appears at story's beginning---and sticks with Simon almost throughout---becomes strangely intriguing. Who, indeed, is Louise? His fiancée-to-be......is she really? Or is she something else?Next, there's the question of his family: Simon has an unhappy relationship with his father, one of misunderstandings. The connection with his 2-year older sister is a contentious one. That then leaves his loving and protective mother......a mother who comes across as being ultimately perceptive of a very fragile son. This, strangely, is the same mother who at film's end gives him absolutely catastrophic news......and then, ending the family's vacation, departs their seaside home leaving Simon completely alone. At that point we have been given, in a most jolting manner by the film's writer/director, something her type mother would never, never ever do.Ah.........but Mother is not to worry for, as this tale draws to an end, a shockingly devastating scene is being caught for us and for her by "video camera nut," Simon----preserving on film, as he so likes to do, life's important events.If any film on DVD cries out for a Director's Commentary, it is this one. As just one reason, there are numerous action jumps / changes wherein the preceding scene activity has (apparently?) nothing to do with that which follows. Some are only one shot long (such as a night-time scene of a man entering a near-distant home of two lit rooms, then moving from one room to the other, turning out lights as he goes-----leaving us with only a twinkling indoor Christmas tree as the shot fades). What's that about?=======================(How I love the oh-so-fitting label reviewer, Chris Knipp, of Berkeley, CA, has applied to Gaspard Ulliel--- 'Savage Fawn')****
danandchad The movie starts a little maudlin. Homeward bound for his family holiday, he meets a young woman on a train. He brings her home with him, and the family assume they are a couple and have been. He introduces her to a past friend, with undertones that it was a previous unrequited love interest. As she moves away from him towards a relationship with that friend, loneliness sets in. It brought back feelings of loneliness and emptiness, combined with anger and jealousy I felt at those ages (having been in the same scenario coming of age). To say it's better to have loved and lost has no bearing in this story. To see someone come of age with a story as this one rarely has a good outcome; I survived, many do not. The story takes a real almost unrealized twist toward the end, all I will say is pay attention to names and time-lines. I know my past was not the norm and hopefully most people seeing this movie, would be viewing it as the abstract life of another. No one should live through that pain and emptiness. I cried for an hour after the film was over.
W de Bruin I recently saw this movie on the International Filmfestival in Rotterdam and was wondering if someone knew who did the soundtrack. I have this song humming in my head, but cannot find the title and performing artist(s)... The movie is about a young French boy who's being followed on the train from Paris to his home on the coast by a girl. So he brings this girl home with him and his parents assume they are boy and girlfriend. When the girl is introduced to a friend of the boy she starts to fancy him more and the boy starts to feel lonely. It looks like she is using him. She sleeps with him, but has sex with his mate. When you think you have figured it out, there comes a nice twist in the story! I liked it and of course the music!