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Last Orders
Directed by
Fred Schepisi
PG-13
2001
1h 49m
Drama
,
Comedy
6.9
79%
73%
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A group of old friends reminisce about their lives over the years after the death of one of their crew.
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Where to Watch Last Orders
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Cast of Last Orders
Michael Caine
Jack
Tom Courtenay
Vic
David Hemmings
Lenny
Bob Hoskins
Ray
Helen Mirren
Amy
Ray Winstone
Vince
JJ Feild
Young Jack
Cameron Fitch
Young Vic
Nolan Hemmings
Young Lenny
Anatol Yusef
Young Ray
Kelly Reilly
Young Amy
Stephen McCole
Young Vince
George Innes
Bernie
Laura Morelli
June
Sally Hurst
Mandy
Denise Black
Carol
Sue James
Pam
Meg Wynn Owen
Joan
Kitty Leigh
Young Carol
Alex Reid
Young Pam
Tracey Murphy
Young Joan
Claire Harman
Young Sally
Teresa Lloyd
Ray's Prostitute
Last Orders Ratings & Reviews
Chicago Tribune
Michael Wilmington
A movie I loved on first sight and, even more important, love in remembrance.
Orlando Sentinel
Jay Boyar
The film, like its characters, is limited by a provincial self-absorption.
Washington Post
Desson Thomson
With a cast of this vintage, it wouldn't matter if they were reading the telephone book to one another, things are always entertaining.
Los Angeles Times
Kenneth Turan
Gathering its forces slowly, this careful, thoughtful film, quietly but deeply moving, is dramatic without seeming to be.
Washington Post
Stephen Hunter
There's a wondrous sense of what all men should leave behind them: friendship, forgiveness and reconciliation.
Boston Globe
Jay Carr
There's been no richer cinematic tapestry of humanity so far this year.
Detroit News
Susan Stark
This is human comedy at its most amusing, interesting and confirming.
Detroit Free Press
Terry Lawson
If Fred Schepisi's adaptation of Graham Swift's Booker Prize-winning Last Orders can't really do justice to the novel, it does extremely well by its cast, thank you.
Houston Chronicle
Eric Harrison
The lovely and richly textured British film Last Orders is as well-acted as any film you'll ever see.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Eleanor Ringel Cater
Offers nostalgia laced with lyricism and regret. And it poses a haunting question: When does a memory become part of the past?
Philadelphia Inquirer
Carrie Rickey
An epic with the economy of an epitaph, a flawlessly told tale about a flawed man.
Austin Chronicle
Steve Davis
While the flashback structure through which the surviving characters relive the past may have worked in the novel, it doesn't work here on the screen.
Variety
David Stratton
Delicately handled and superbly textured, this fine adaptation of Graham Swift's Booker Prize-winning novel deals with all the really big subjects: love, friendship, death, life.
Observer
Andrew Sarris
Though the book runs only about 300 pages, it is so densely packed ... that even an ambitious adaptation and elaborate production like Mr. Schepisi's seems skimpy and unclear.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Peter Rainer
The actors here are so extraordinarily adept at portraying the silences and exultations of their characters that the film becomes a kind of ode to comradeship, one unblinkered by cant or sentimentality.
Seattle Times
Moira MacDonald
The splendid ensemble cast inhabits these unglamorous roles with quiet gusto.
Dallas Morning News
Chris Vognar
A must for fans of British cinema, if only because so many titans of the industry are along for the ride.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
An enervated, overly muted drama that should have been a lot livelier, considering the terrific cast.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
Because I share history and memories with these actors, it is easy to stand at the bar with their characters as they regard the urn of ashes.
Newsday
Jan Stuart
The performers are so spot on, it is hard to conceive anyone else in their roles.
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Last Orders
Last Orders
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Fight
Fight
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Margate
Margate
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Jacking It In
Jacking It In
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Here's To Jack
Here's To Jack
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To Whom It May Concern
To Whom It May Concern
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Jack Should Get The Best
Jack Should Get The Best
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