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The Last Hurrah (2010 film)

The Last Hurrah
The Last Hurrah Poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jonathan W. Stokes
Produced by
  • Jonathan W. Stokes
  • Richie Molyneux
  • Peter Marr
  • Chad Law
  • Charles DeRosa
  • Executive Producer:
  • Anthony Vasto
Written by Jonathan W. Stokes
Starring
Music by
Cinematography Charles DeRosa
Edited by Jay Trautman
Production
company
New Epic
Distributed by Cinema Libre Studio
Release date
Running time
88 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$ 120,000 (est)

The Last Hurrah is a 2009 American comedy drama film written and directed by Jonathan Stokes. After receiving recognition at film festivals in 2009, the film was released on DVD in February 2010, to mildly warm reviews.

At a graduation party in Los Angeles, an eclectic group of brainy philosophy students, train-hopping hippies, aspiring prophets, and drug-addled hipsters come together for one last wild night. Over the course of the graduation party, characters fall in and out of love and struggle to figure out what to do with the rest of their lives.

The movie is filmed in one single, continuous 88 minute shot. The director states that the film was inspired by Richard Linklater and Woody Allen, with dialogue intended to be "a lot of fast-paced one-liners. A lot of philosophy." Obstacles encountered while shooting the film as one take included coordinating a film crew in a party scene filled with extras, and equipment limitations such as cameras with 30 minutes shot length. Filming took five nights of shooting attempts - on the fifth night, "the film came together."

DVD Verdict offered "while it isn't a disaster, it lacks the punch to keep viewers fully engaged", finding the plot intriguing, but that there seemed to be more attention paid to the continuous shot than to the script and story. The review continued that the party concept had potential, but became "monotonous", and was not deeply engrossing. The film was deemed "worth watching", with sound acting; "technically, it's a solid indie film, but in terms of story, it lacks energy and variety."

The WeHo News called the production "a brilliant conceit from writer and director Jonathan Stokes," in which the filmmaker "gives us a great slice of life" representing the "disparate assemblage of oddballs inhabiting this eclectic city." The review described the film's single continuous take as a "compelling and challenging aspect that is unique", which "at times [...] overpowers the snappy dialogue, too clever by half." Favorably compared to American Pie, the film is described as "transcending the genre." While criticizing the dialogue's overuse of homophobic epithets and lack of any LGBT characters, the review concluded that the project as a whole was "a clever, audacious film well worth a viewing."


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