Last Night (1998 film)

Last Night

Theatrical poster
Directed by Don McKellar
Produced by Niv Fichman
Daniel Iron
Written by Don McKellar
Starring Don McKellar
Sandra Oh
Tracy Wright
Callum Keith Rennie
Sarah Polley
David Cronenberg
Music by Alexina Louie
Alex Pauk
Cinematography Douglas Koch
Edited by Reginald Harkema
Production
company
Distributed by Lionsgate
Release dates
Running time
95 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Budget $2,300,000 CAD[1] ($1,600,000 USD)
Box office $591,165[2]

Last Night is a 1998 Canadian black comedy-drama film directed by Don McKellar.[3] It was filmed in Toronto.

Plot

Set in Toronto at an unknown date, Last Night tells the story of how a variety of intersecting characters spend their final evening on Earth. It seems the world is to end at midnight as the result of a calamity that is not explained, but which has been expected for several months. There are several scenes of an ominously glowing sun, which gets progressively larger and brighter even into the night.

Some people in the film choose to spend their last evening alone, others with loved ones, others in prayer, others in public mayhem, and still others at raucous festivities. Duncan (David Cronenberg), the owner of a power company, spends the majority of his final day calling up every single one of his customers to reassure them that their heating gas will be kept on until the very end. Meanwhile, his wife Sandra (Sandra Oh) prepares to fulfill their suicide pact when she becomes stranded with a depressed widower Patrick (Don McKellar) preparing to die while listening to music and drinking wine on his roof, surrounded by mementoes of his recently deceased wife. The widower's best friend Craig (Callum Keith Rennie) participates in a nearly non-stop sex marathon as he attempts to fulfill every fantasy he has ever had, at one point awkwardly asking Patrick to join him. Sarah Polley appears as Patrick's sister Jennifer; their family chooses to have a final meal together although he leaves prematurely to seek his own finale. Jackie Burroughs makes an appearance as an apparently mentally disturbed woman who jogs around announcing how much time is left before the end. Arsinée Khanjian also appears as a mother on an abandoned streetcar who is paralyzed by despair.

In the climax of the film, Patrick and Sandra decide to fulfill the suicide pact that her husband was unable to complete. As midnight approaches, they both sit on the roof facing each other, listening to the song "Guantanamera", each holding a loaded pistol to the other's temple. As the final minutes approach, Sandra implores Patrick to resolutely carry out the pact. But as the final seconds approach, both characters are overcome with emotion and simultaneously let their pistols slip away as they slowly embrace in a kiss and the last moments of all the major characters are seen. It is at this moment that the world, and the lives of all of its characters, end.

Cast

Awards

Among its 12 awards, it won the "Award of the Youth" at the Cannes Film Festival, Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 1998 Toronto International Film Festival, and three Genie Awards: the Claude Jutra Award for best feature film by a first-time director (Don McKellar), and the Genies for "Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role" (Sandra Oh) and "Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role" (Callum Keith Rennie). In 2002, readers of Playback magazine voted Last Night the ninth greatest Canadian film of all-time.[4]

References

  1. On set with Don McKeller's Last Night. Playback. Retrieved March 03, 2014
  2. "Last Night (1999)". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com. Retrieved October 8, 2011.
  3. "Last Night". AllMovie.
  4. Canada’s all-time best movies list. Playback. Retrieved March 03, 2014

External links

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