Review: The Last Lullaby (2009)

Steve Rhodes steve.rhodes at internetreviews.com
Fri May 22 12:50:01 EDT 2009


THE LAST LULLABY
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 2009 Steve Rhodes

RATING (0 TO ****):  *** 1/2

"You decided you wanted her dead," Price (Tom Sizemore), an aging hit man, 
tells his new client, "that means she's already dead.  She just doesn't know 
it yet."  And a few days later, when Sarah (Sasha Alexander) hasn't been 
murdered yet, Price has to reassure his restless client that hiring him 
means the act is certain -- repeating a variation on his personal corporate 
motto -- "She's already dead, just hasn't had the obit yet."

THE LAST LULLABY is brilliantly directed by Jeffrey Goodman, who was at our 
screening for a Q&A afterwards.  He said that when he first spoke to 
Sizemore about the role, Sizemore said "I am Price."  Whether that is right 
or not, his very believable acting in THE LAST LULLABY argues that the 
actor's assessment is correct.  In fact, Goodman said that if someone told 
him that in real life Sizemore had killed someone, he'd sure believe it.

In a consistently captivating performance, Sizemore plays a taciturn 
contract killer who thinks he has retired from the job.  A beefy, middle-age 
guy, Price hasn't forgotten any of his skills and likes nothing better than 
dealing with the young bucks who try to get in his way.  But it isn't only 
Sizemore whose acting is performed with dead-on accuracy.  The entire cast 
works at what appears to be the top of their form.

As the movie opens, we observe Price as he stumbles onto a job.  Realizing 
that a kidnapping is in progress of a woman named Jules (Sprague Grayden 
from "Jericho"), he decides to help her out -- but not quite in the way you 
might imagine.  He saves her from her second-rate kidnappers, who would 
probably kill her and take the ransom too.  Price decides to kidnap her 
himself and kill her current crop of incompetent kidnappers.

The director shows a real gift for figuring out how to stage dramatic and 
effective gun fights, of which there are several in the film, without 
letting the movie dissolve into a typical action thriller.  More a drama 
than a thriller, the movie's best part is its carefully constructed sound 
design.  The director told us that his picture was a revolt against movies 
today, which, while trying to reflect our society, just keep getting louder 
and faster.  He slows the scenes down and minimizes the use of music and 
most background noise, so that the characters take the forefront.

Calling his style "naturalistic," the director clearly wanted us to pay more 
attention to the nuances of the characters.  It really works.  There are 
some good twists and turns in the plot and an excellent story as well, but 
it is the human emotions and motivations that will stay with you long after 
you leave the theater.

If more movies were as well designed and realized as THE LAST LULLABY, going 
to the theater would be dramatically more satisfying.  New filmmakers should 
look at it as a paradigm on how movies should be made.

THE LAST LULLABY runs 1:33.  It is rated R for "violence and language" and 
would be acceptable for teenagers.

The film is playing in limited release now in the United States.  In the 
Silicon Valley, it will be showing at one of the Camera Cinemas from June 12 
to 18, 2009.  The movie was shown recently at the Camera Cinema Club 
(http://www.cameracinemas.com) of Campbell and San Jose and was shown as 
part of San Jose's Cinequest Film Festival (www.Cinequest.org), which ran 
February 25-March 8, 2009.

Web: http://www.InternetReviews.com
Email: Steve.Rhodes at InternetReviews.com

***********************************************************************

Want reviews of new films via Email?
Just write Steve.Rhodes at InternetReviews.com and put "subscribe" in the 
subject line.



More information about the rec-arts-movies-reviews mailing list