Ceticultsot
Beautiful, moving film.
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Lollivan
It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Humaira Grant
It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
Syl
First, I saw this film in Venice, Italy last August but I didn't see all of it. We went sightseeing. Finally last night, it emerged on late night television and I made a point to watch it. The two actresses who play Beth and Diana are brilliant in their performances. Their characters are far more alike than different. Beth is a struggling single mother of a wheelchair bound son, Benji, who she loves more than anything. She is having a rough day would be an understatement. Nothing appears to go right. Benji's father bought a house an hour away and wants to file for custody of him with his wife. Beth loses her job as a result of incompetence or lack of compassion. She doesn't have enough money in her bank account to buy her son a telescope so she pawns her necklace. She gets into a road rage incident which is equally her fault but then nobody appears to stop her. Diana is a married mother of two children with another on the way. She is equally having a bad day. Her husband is unemployed and they are on the verge of losing their home. Her son was caught bringing a gun to an expensive prep school and was expelled. Her daughter's needs are never quite answered. She needs a promotion to save her family and she needs to reassure her status in the business world. I didn't like the ending. The plot was suspenseful and kept moving along but I won't spoil it for others. You have to see it to believe it.
Shhhtick
I believe the moral of this story is - If you can help it - DON'T LIVE IN A BIG CITY. Even the best people on earth can have a bad day, but living in a big city where everyone is for themselves can turn anyone into road rage. People need to show a little compassion for the other guy and not live just in their own life.This movie was very well portrayed by the two women involved. Totally different lives, totally different views, but ended up in the same situation.I know not all people will agree and not very many will even watch the movie, but if at least 1 person stops themselves from road rage, it was worth it.
meline_nadeau
Against a gritty urban landscape, Last Exit follows a single day in the lives of Beth Welland and Diana Burke, two mothers following two seemingly different paths. Beth (Kathleen Robertson) is a single mother to Benji, a young boy confined to a wheelchair and their cramped apartment overlooking an expressway. While Beth seems to take it all in stride, a growing desperation lurks beneath her sunny disposition. For Diana (Andrea Roth), a married mother of two with a highly successful career in advertising, life is all about keeping everybody else happy amidst the growing anxiety that she may be in over her head. In the oppressive heat of an urban summer, the lives of these two women have violently collided. And, as police officers race to their uncertain rescue, parallel flashbacks gradually bring the shards of a shattered puzzle back into focus, providing the truthful and deeply unsettling causes for the tragic effects. What ensues will change both women, together with the people they love, completely and for the rest of their lives. The film had me on the edge of my seat the entire time and I found myself deeply changed by the experience. Beth and Diana's struggle stayed with me for days and more than once, and had a profound impact on my attitude and actions when I'm behind the wheel. If you've ever experienced the frustration of daily commuting through a congested urban centre, you will relate. Last Exit is a definite must-see.
frank479
They don't tell you this in the plot outline but early into this movie you realize that Murphy, of the ill-famed 'Murphy's Laws,' apparently has written himself into this script :^). As you're watching this movie, it will slowly reel you in. By the time you're 3/4 into it, you'll find yourself amazed, thinking just how good it is. But, by then, you're just scratching the surface of where this movie is going to take you. And by the end, you'll be glad that you decided to invest the time to watch it. This movie leaves you feeling. And, most importantly, you'll learn something about life and yourself from the experience because, during the movie, you'll be constantly comparing your life to the ones you're witnessing on the screen. And I bet, you'll see a bit of yourself there sometimes. This movie makes you profoundly think about a lot of things. Kudos to the director.