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Last Days

United States

2005

97 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.1/5 Stars.
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DIR Gus Van Sant

PROD Dany Wolf

SCR Gus Van Sant

DP Harris Savides

CAST Michael Pitt, Lukas Haas

Synopsis

Filmmaker Gus Van Sant wrote and directed this meditation on stardom and its costs, inspired in part by the life and death of rock musician Kurt Cobain. Blake (Michael Pitt) is the leader of an influential alternative rock band who has unexpectedly won a large degree of fame and fortune. Depressed and unsure of what to do with himself or his success, Blake wanders about the run-down mansion he calls home and the visits the woods nearby. While a handful of friends live with Blake, he prefers to avoid them, as they often seem more interested in money or help with their music than in his friendship; meanwhile, Blake is also confronted by a handful of fans, his agent, and a gentleman who sells advertising space in a telephone directory and has no idea who Blake is. As Blake goes through the motions of his day, he tries to decide what he should do next, and what might finally free him from his ennui. Shot and edited in the same languid, low-key manner as his films Elephant and Gerry, Last Days also stars Lukas Haas, Asia Argento, Scott Green, Ricky Jay, and Harmony Korine. Kim Gordon of the band Sonic Youth also appears in the film, while her husband and bandmate Thurston Moore was a consultant for the musical score; both were friends of Kurt Cobain and toured in tandem with Nirvana on several occasions. —allmovie guide

Director

Gus_van_sant

Gus Van Sant

A director who is capable of crafting both deeply unconventional independent films and mainstream crowd-pleasers, Gus Van Sant has managed to carve an enviable niche for himself in Hollywood. Since debuting in 1985 with Mala Noche, Van Sant has become one of the premiere bards of dysfunction, populating his films with a parade of hustlers, junkies, psychopathic weather girls, homicidal teens, and troubled geniuses.

The son of a traveling salesman, Van Sant was born in Louisville, KY, on July 24, 1952. One constant in the director’s early years was his interest in painting and Super-8 filmmaking. Van Sant’s artistic leanings took him to the Rhode Island School of Design in 1970, where introduction to Avant-Garde cinema quickly inspired him to change his major from painting to cinema. After mobving to LA, Van Sant became fascinated by the existence of the marginalized section of L.A.‘s population, especially in context with the more ordinary prosperous world that surrounded them… read more

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gino

18Oct09

Last Days is an intimate Film about Kurt Cobain's last days as a musician under the brutal influence of heroine. Van Sant follows him around the grounds of a beautiful mansion, through equally beautiful shots. No doubt, it's Script is minimal and to call it drawn out would be an understatement- but it's a great movie, and one of the best acting jobs of all his Films.  
Picture of ryan werner

ryan werner

14Oct09

for me along with elephant & paranoid park, these are three of the masterpieces of recent years. i don't think there is anything like them. they are are the works of a master.  
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Rui

7Oct09

Self-indulgent crap. Boring as hell. Ideal for art-school types that want to show they are really interested in cinema. Well... they're not. See "Drugstore Cowboy" or to "To Die For", those are good movies. The return to his independent roots only produced one good film until now, which is "Paranoid Park".  
Picture of Jared Bynum

Jared Bynum

16Sep09

Blake walks And walks And walks And walks And walks. And he plays guitar too. Plus, Kim Gordon shows up. How nice. Don't be put off by the idea of a biopic. This one doesn't fade away. It just burns you out.  

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Reviews

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Last Days

By Mike on January 19, 2010

As far as I’m concerned, going into Last Days expecting to see a portrait of Kurt Cobain is an immediate mistake. Allegedly, writer/director Gus Van Sant’s initial intentions with the project were…  read review

Untitled

By defined​ivine on October 29, 2009

Ok, i can say that Pitt again is outstanding, but in general, what was the film purpose, what was deeper meaning. Maybe it’s just me that didn’t get the film, but besides the scene where Blake is playing…  read review

Untitled

By Lucas Granero on August 13, 2009

Con esa especie de poder visual que se suele desprender del reciente cine de Gus Van Sant, “Last Days” se transforma en una pelicula única, que se aleja de esa idea que se podria haber tenido acerca…  read review

Untitled

By Kenneth G. on June 24, 2009

Despite my uninterest in Elephant, I agree that this film is highly underrated and under-viewed. The attention to detail, emotion (or post-addiction lack-thereof), and music are spot-on and help you…  read review

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