Last Night (I) (1998)
7/10
An interesting allegorical tale
7 July 2012
Last Night is an original and intelligent Canadian independent film that takes a literal look at the phrase "live each day like it was the last day of your life"; it starts with the hypothetical situation in which the world is about to end, and the date and even the time are known to everybody (don't look for any scientific logic behind that - the actual method of the apocalypse is left intentionally unclear), and follows several characters who have different ideas of how they want to spend that final day.

The concept is appealing and immediately creates an infinite number of possibilities; the script makes the most of it, though I feel it could have been better. My main problem is with the main character - played by writer/director Don McKellar - who takes up a large chunk of the screen time but is far less interesting than most of the secondary characters (this is not because of McKellar's acting but mainly because the character is probably an avatar for McKellar himself and therefore far less extreme). This, couple with acting that is sometimes great but often wooden and lacking in emotion (a strange trait of many Canadian independent films) makes the film less effective emotionally than it should have been, and keeps it in the category of though-provoking allegory and intellectual exercise. As such, it's a wonderful little film and a very unusual one.
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