home • about bcbc unplugged • previous issue • advertisingclassifiedsdistribution • carpe diem publications contact us
regulars
20 years on
hip-hop stories
star wreck and iron sky
songs without end
pandas, gustation and mickey mouse
animal essentials
of love and lies
editor's bit
editor's diary
yuan yang
spike
live music
se7en quickies:
nick flavell [helium3]
club scene
beat 'n tracks
barfly
bcene
bars and clubs
megabites
entertainment listings
film
  antivenom for venice
star trek (2009)
terminator salvation
blood: the last vampire
duplicity
coco before chanel
last chance harvey
competitions
sports & leisure
macau
mafanjai

Last Chance Harvey

Starring:
Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Eileen Atkins, James Brolin, Liane Balaban, Kathy Baker, Richard Schiff

Director:
Joel Hopkins

Scheduled release:
18 June

A film so mild-mannered it only occasionally registers a pulse, Joel Hopkins' Last Chance Harvey is best viewed as proof that not all filmed entertainment these days is nihilistic and grim. Occasionally there are still movies made about gentle, middle-aged people who have had a (mildly) hard time of things but still manage to find love in the gloaming of their years. The problem here being that mildness of heart does not translate into quality of art, or even entertainment.

The Hallmark-ready story begins with Harvey Shine (Dustin Hoffman), a borderline jerk of a guy who appears to have shut down on life by the time we find him. A jingle writer who once hoped for greater things musically, he's on his way to London where his daughter is marrying into a family that seems to have a greater affinity for his ex-wife's new husband than himself.

Set up on the y-axis of the meet-cute diagram is Kate Walker (Emma Thompson), a woman of depressed disposition who works at Heathrow when she's not fielding phone calls from a batty and lonely mother. Kate is the sort of character who is always being pushed into romance by co-workers who worry about her, but is sick of being disappointed by love, so would just rather stick with a good book and give the love a pass.

After far too long a setup, in which both Kate and Harvey (but particularly Harvey) undergo a series of increasingly uncomfortable humiliations, the two are finally tossed together in the same airport restaurant. Kate is getting over a particularly painful blind date experience, while Harvey has just left the wedding early to fly back to New York for work, only to find out that there's no job waiting for him anyway. And his flight was cancelled. Harvey does the logical thing: start drinking and flirt with the attractive woman reading a book over a lonely salad.

The budding romantic interlude that follows would have been easier to swallow had writer/director Hopkins not spent so much time establishing Harvey as an exceedingly unpleasant brand of jerk. Kate seems perfectly fine, a nice woman who has simply had a run of bad luck; it's no wonder that an exhausted and at-wit's-end man would fall for her. But the witty, intensely romantic Harvey who emerges after his moment of crisis is so unrecognizable from the self-centered guy who had so recently inhabited his skin that it's a hard transformation to swallow.

Hopkins establishes an unhurried mood early on, and so it's comparatively easy to watch Harvey and Kate wander the streets of London – a strange place in the film's world, where Paddington Station appears to be a stone's throw from the Thames – and bat light humor and mild flirtations back and forth. But the film is too light a creation to make believable their sudden infatuation, burying the glimmers of romance underneath schmaltz and manufactured obviousness.

Having both been relegated for too long to the status of prominently credited quality supporting actors, it's wonderful for both Hoffman and Thompson that they are allowed to take hold of the screen and leave nobody with any doubts that they are stars in every sense of the word. Of course, it would have been nice had they chosen a better vehicle for such an endeavor, but you can't have everything in life. Chris Barsanti

 

previous issue

bc magazine issue 280 - 15 May 2009
issue 280
14 may 2009

bc magazine issue 278 - 16 April 2009
issue 279
1 may 2009

bc magazine issue 278 - 16 April 2009
issue 278
16 april 2009

bc magazine issue 277 - 2 April 2009
issue 277
2 april 2009

bc magazine issue 276 - 19 March 2009
issue 276
19 march 2009

bc magazine issue 275 - 5 March 2009
issue 275
5 march 2009

bc magazine issue 274 - 12 February 2009
issue 274
12 february 2009





© 1994-2009 carpe diem publications limited. all rights reserved.