The Last Kiss (Blu-ray) R
We all make choices. What's yours?
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 1 hours, 43 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: October 10, 2017
- Originally Released: 2006
- Label: Paramount
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Zach Braff, Jacinda Barrett & Casey Affleck | |
Performer: | Michael Weston, Rachel Bilson, Tom Wilkinson, Harold Ramis, Blythe Danner & Eric Christian Olsen | |
Directed by | Tony Goldwyn | |
Edited by | Lisa Zeno Churgin | |
Screenwriting by | Paul Haggis | |
Composition by | Michael Penn | |
Produced by | Andre Lamal, Marcus Viscidi, Gary Lucchesi & Tom Rosenberg | |
Director of Photography: | Tom Stern |
Entertainment Reviews:
Danner will surely win an Oscar if enough people see this film, but the real point is that her stormy, erratic gender-bender Lear performance elevates The Last Kiss above a well-made genre drama.
Salon.com
Rating: 2/4 --
Only the most rabid chick-flick fan will fail to notice that it's the movie that's all wet.
Rolling Stone
... what makes The Last Kiss especially satisfying is its vision of love as the soul of partnership -- rather than the crack high known as romance -- and something worth fighting for.
Full Review
Washington Post
3 stars out of 5 -- [T]he SCRUBS man is a star made, taking his easy GARDEN STATE charm and tagging on a thirtysomething maturity certain to make him a celluloid fixture for years. Rachel Bilson, too, makes giant strides...
Total Film
Rating: D- --
The Last Kiss bears the unmistakable Haggis touch, one as subtle and understated as an electric chainsaw through the spinal cord.
Full Review
AV Club
An intelligent examination of dreams deferred....This film cuts pretty deep.
Box Office
Rating: 3/5 --
This drama is a well-crafted and heartfelt look at commitment, infidelity and the end of youth.
Full Review
BBC.com
Product Description:
Based on the Italian film L'ULTIMO BACIO and directed by Tony Goldwyn (A WALK ON THE MOON), THE LAST KISS is a film about growing pains and choices. Nearing his 30th birthday, marriage-phobic Michael (Zach Braff) loves his live-in girlfriend Jenna (Jacinda Barrett), but worries that there are no surprises left in his life. Enter Kim (Rachel Bilson), a vibrant college student Michael meets at a wedding. Soon, he finds himself treading in dangerous territory; he loves Jenna, but is intrigued by Kim and attracted to both her and to the possibilities that a new relationship offers. With Kim, Michael not only feels 10 years younger, but also as if anything is possible. Now, he has to decide if pursuing Kim is worth the risk of losing Jenna, and if the life he has planned with Jenna is in fact the life he really wants.
Michael, meanwhile, is not the only one experiencing growing pains; his friends have their own relationship issues. Izzy (Michael Weston) is battling heartbreak after being dumped by his longtime girlfriend. Chris (Casey Affleck) and his wife already have a rocky relationship, and are feeling the stress of having their first baby. Kenny (Eric Christian Olsen) is the only one without relationship issues--but that's only because he is determined to remain a single ladies' man. Then there are Jenna's parents, Anna (Blythe Danner) and Stephen (Tom Wilkinson), who are facing their own issues after 30 years of marriage. THE LAST KISS looks at relationships from all angles, and shies away from finger-pointing and laying blame. Instead, it acknowledges that the world is full of temptation, and that growing up is serious business. Braff does a nice job of conveying Michael's confusion without asking for sympathy.
Michael, meanwhile, is not the only one experiencing growing pains; his friends have their own relationship issues. Izzy (Michael Weston) is battling heartbreak after being dumped by his longtime girlfriend. Chris (Casey Affleck) and his wife already have a rocky relationship, and are feeling the stress of having their first baby. Kenny (Eric Christian Olsen) is the only one without relationship issues--but that's only because he is determined to remain a single ladies' man. Then there are Jenna's parents, Anna (Blythe Danner) and Stephen (Tom Wilkinson), who are facing their own issues after 30 years of marriage. THE LAST KISS looks at relationships from all angles, and shies away from finger-pointing and laying blame. Instead, it acknowledges that the world is full of temptation, and that growing up is serious business. Braff does a nice job of conveying Michael's confusion without asking for sympathy.