Parental Content Review
Last Chance Harvey (2008)
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Reviews Counted:146
Fresh:102
Rotten:44
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: Last Chance Harvey is an above-average story that graduates to potent romantic drama based on the chemistry and charm of its top-notch performers.
Theatrical Release:Dec 25, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $14,840,421
Synopsis: Set in London, this romantic comedy stars Dustin Hoffman as Harvey Shine, a divorced and haggard jingle-writer quickly aging out of his career and workaholic ways. With a warning from his boss... Set in London, this romantic comedy stars Dustin Hoffman as Harvey Shine, a divorced and haggard jingle-writer quickly aging out of his career and workaholic ways. With a warning from his boss (Richard Schiff) to not bother rushing back, Harvey goes to London, begrudgingly, for his daughter's wedding, fielding that work calls the whole time he's there. When Harvey greets his estranged daughter, Susie (Liane Balaban), it becomes clear just how far away he's grown from his family. The film never spells out in exactly what ways Harvey was a bad father, but it is clear he missed the boat when Susie asks her stepfather (James Brolin) to give her away. As Harvey leaves his heartbreak at the ceremony for an emergency work call, he misses his flight and gets fired. While nursing a whiskey at the airport bar, Harvey bumps into Kate (Emma Thompson), an airport employee escaping her own bad day with a glass of wine and a book. Suddenly taken by Kate's British charm, a tipsy Harvey bombards her with tales of his trouble. This unlikely trading of sob stories leads to lunch, a walk around London, and a day of unexpected romance. Thompson is charming as Kate, a lonely middle-age woman struggling to deal with her mother's constant prying into her life. Despite not having had the best of luck in romance, Kate is an optimist at heart, and it's this spark for life that attracts Harvey and ultimately helps repair his image in his daughter's eyes. Never showy or too ambitious, Joel Hopkins's slow-paced romance twists old clichés to suit a more adult audience. While not groundbreaking in its plot, LAST CHANCE HARVEY is saved by great performances from the always-solid Hoffman and the incredibly charming Thompson, who makes an otherwise familiar story feel fresh. [More]
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Kathy Baker, James Brolin
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Kathy Baker, James Brolin, Eileen Atkins, Richard Schiff, Liane Balaban
Director: Joel Hopkins
Director: Joel Hopkins
Screenwriter: Joel Hopkins
Producer: Tim Perell, Nicola Usborne
Composer: Dickon Hinchliffe
Studio: Overture Films
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Reviews for Last Chance Harvey
Minor in both key and purpose, Joel Hopkins' Last Chance Harvey is a pleasantly hopeful film about the possibilities of late happiness.
This is the type of film that lives or dies solely on the strength of the chemistry generated between the lead actors and in that regard, the end result is a success thanks to the efforts of Hoffman and Thompson
It's wonderful to watch young people falling in love for the first time. But it is even more wonderful to see people falling in love for the last time.
Last Chance Harvey is nothing you haven't seen before. It's just done with older actors, a bit more poignancy, and a bit more class
... it's a pleasure to see mature portraits of adult characters who put their vulnerabilities on the line.
Writer-director Joel Hopkins should thank his lucky stars that Hoffman and Thompson are on board. Some of the story and dialogue are hokey, but the actors overcome those obstacles.
Sort of a Before Sunrise for the sunset years, this quiet romantic comedy takes a cinematic chestnut and somehow infuses it with a sense of rue and regret that makes it seem new.
Thompson displays a tart but looser-than-usual wit, and Hoffman is also genuinely funny and endearing, no small feat after the unsettling spectacle that was Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium.
It's well done by the two leads, who register as real enough to rescue the movie at almost every turn from mawkishness and predictability.
Sappy, sentimental and redeemed only by the quiet radiance and fidgety intelligence of its leads, Last Chance Harvey is a fantasy about mopey middle-agers getting a second chance at love.
How refreshing to be in the hands of a filmmaker who doesn't follow a diagram he found in the pages of "Seven Easy Steps to a Boffo Screenplay."
Last Chance Harvey is a tremendously appealing love story surrounded by a movie not worthy of it.
[Hoffman and Thompson's] talent and experience allow them to make Last Chance Harvey more than it might have been.
Last Chance Harvey is the sort of insipid romantic comedy that, had it starred a pair of 20-somethings or 30-somethings, would be instantly dismissed by one and all.
A great film? By no means. But if you take it as the pleasant -- and blessedly non-shrill -- romance it is, there's a good bit to like.
Hoffman and Thompson team to weave movie magic via a vintage romantic roundelay.
Latest News for Last Chance Harvey
January 12, 2009:
Aging jingle writer revivified by shy spinster in bittersweet romantic comedy. ![]()
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October 27, 2008:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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