At best, it's aggressively mediocre, a movie that passes the time without ever really engaging your attention.
The Last Legion (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:52
Fresh:9
Rotten:43
Average Rating:4.1/10
Consensus: With miscast leads and unoriginal, uninspired dialogue, The Last Legion pales in comparison to the recent cinematic epics it invokes.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sequences of intense action violence.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:Aug 17, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $125,769,808
Synopsis: THE LAST LEGION is a reason to rejoice for action fans who prefer their battle scenes to be composed of flesh and blood rather than megabytes. Based on the novel by Valerio Manfredi, this is a... THE LAST LEGION is a reason to rejoice for action fans who prefer their battle scenes to be composed of flesh and blood rather than megabytes. Based on the novel by Valerio Manfredi, this is a sword-and-sandal epic that deftly weaves a tale of the fall of the Roman Empire with myth and magic, giving us plenty of swordplay and liberal doses of knowingly corny humor. In Rome of 476 A.D., 12-year-old Romulus Augustus (Thomas Sangster) is to be crowned emperor at the same time that barbarian king Odoacer (Peter Mullan) arrives with his fierce warriors--led by brutish Wulfila (Kevin McKidd)--to slaughter everyone in sight. With his family dead, young Romulus is captured and taken, along with his teacher--the wise mystic Ambrosinus (Ben Kingsley)--to the island of Capri. Learning that the Byzantine Empire has offered a safe haven for Romulus, surviving Roman soldier Aurelius (Colin Firth) teams up with fierce female warrior Mira (Aishwarya Rai) and sets out to retrieve the boy. Deceit on the part of the Byzantines, however, necessitates that Aurelius change direction for Britannia, home of the last safe outpost for Romans. In an era where every thrill-ride film strives to be louder, bloodier, and more boundary-stretching than the next, THE LAST LEGION shows a charming, family-friendly restraint. The cast, led by two veteran English actors (Kingsley and Firth, the good guys), two fine Scottish actors (Mullan and McKidd, the baddies), and a Bollywood superstar (Rai, grand in her action sequence), is clearly having a blast. With rousing, elaborate (and bloodless) battle scenes, liberal humor, and a neat twist at its conclusion, this is old-fashioned B-movie making in the best sense of the word. [More]
Starring: Colin Firth, Ben Kingsley, Aishwarya Rai, Peter Mullan
Starring: Colin Firth, Ben Kingsley, Aishwarya Rai, Peter Mullan, Kevin McKidd, John Hannah, Thomas Sangster, Iain Glen, Rupert Friend
Director: Doug Lefler
Director: Doug Lefler
Screenwriter: Jez Butterworth, Tom Butterworth
Story: Carlo Carlei, Peter Rader, Valerio Manfredi
Producer: Martha De Laurentiis, Raffaella De Laurentiis, Tarak Ben Ammar
Composer: Patrick Doyle
Studio: Weinstein Company
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Reviews for The Last Legion
Despite the occasional gleam of wit, very little is to be taken seriously -- not the story, not the acting and certainly not the history.
Firth is horribly miscast. I'll buy him as a romantic lead or the main character in a drama, but he's almost laughable as an action hero.
There are, after all, aimed at young audiences plenty of movies more mean-spirited, indiscriminate and obnoxious than The Last Legion. But at the same time there are plenty that are, alas, less frustrating.
A hunk of old Brie, left all day in the glove compartment in a car on a hot summer's day, could not smell more ripe than this absurd sword'n'sandal Roman movie.
This movie, for all its quasi-realism, is never as inspiring, interesting, or disturbing as the stories to which it points.
Here's a strange concept: A goofy, Indiana-Jones-type spin on the pre-Arthur legend.
Put yourself in the proper boy's-adventure mindset and The Last Legion's corny moments will just add to the charm.
Crudely mangling Arthurian legend into Roman history, this creaky swords ’n’ sandals romper trundles forward like a hurriedly upholstered TV movie.
While the swashbuckling content is engaging enough on a popcorn level, the attempts at any sort of epic heft fall way short of the mark.
This unoriginal picture also suffers from uninspired dialogue uttered by actors who are better than this and a jokey tone that would work if we hadn’t already heard all the same lines in director Lefler’s tv work in Hercules and Xena.
A novel hybrid of swords, sandals, horned helmets and furs, this really is a load of old rubbish, but there's some fun to be had, especially for boys who like to have mock sword fights with wooden sticks.
The action sequences are handled well enough but the CGI isn't up to snuff in a tale that barely merits the retelling.
The many faults of The Last Legion give way to guilt-free popcorn thrills.
This Anglo-Italian co-production has quite a bit of fun finding a direct path from the fall of Rome to the birth of Arthurian legend.
This sword-and-sandal spectacle from those epic-loving De Laurentiises might have made a good children’s film.
A depressing pageant of bad dialogue, uninspired sword fights, corny getaways, and loads of completely unintentional sexual innuendo.
Lots budgetary-challenged battles of the largely bloodless PG-13 stripe with folks in smelly looking leather suits and crepe hair clanging swords and saying 'Arrgh' a lot.
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August 02, 2007:
The Last Legion - preview & trailer ![]()
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 15% 15% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
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| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 45% 45% | Shorts |
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