CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.6/10
3.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un planificador de bodas agobiado por las deudas se convierte sin querer en un exitoso planificador de funerales. Sin embargo, debe convencer a un sacerdote taoísta tradicional de su legitim... Leer todoUn planificador de bodas agobiado por las deudas se convierte sin querer en un exitoso planificador de funerales. Sin embargo, debe convencer a un sacerdote taoísta tradicional de su legitimidad para seguir operando en el sector.Un planificador de bodas agobiado por las deudas se convierte sin querer en un exitoso planificador de funerales. Sin embargo, debe convencer a un sacerdote taoísta tradicional de su legitimidad para seguir operando en el sector.
- Premios
- 33 premios ganados y 34 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Escritura
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
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Opiniones destacadas
This Should Be On Netflix, and not insipid 'Polo'
I didn't want to go see a movie about a Hong Kong funeral director, but my wife made me go. Sounded boring. But WOW. This is one of those rare movies that can appreciated by all cultures and all age groups. It's a dark comedy that can make you smile or have tears of compassion well up in your eyes -- even as you follow the story in subtitles. I am not familiar with the Chinese actors, I hear that some of them are very well known, and I can see why. They were all brilliant, bringing to live a screenplay that is rich in emotion and drama. Solid editing and post-production work as well. Catch it if you can. Maybe someday it will even be on Netflix!
The Last Dance
"Dominic" (Dayo Wong) is struggling to make ends meet, post COVID, with his business in tatters and his repayment bills at almost $13,000 per month. He's not afraid of hard work, though, so when his "Uncle Ming" (Paul Chun) offers him his share in a funeral parlour he jumps at the chance. His partner - rather sarcastically referred to as "Hello Man" (Michael Hui) comes across as a rather curmudgeonly fellow - a traditionalist Taoist priest who lives with his ambulance-driving daughter "Yuet" (Michelle Wai) and his favourite son "Ben" (Pak Hon Chu) who is attempting to follow in his father's footsteps. Thing is, in his excitement to get the job done and to make enough money to clear his debts, he makes quite a few schoolboy errors at the start that are way more lively to offend the ancestors than send them peaceably on their way to the next life, and that just irks the older man who feels his new pal is disrespectful. As the story unfolds, we follow a young man who learns a little more about a business that is really anything but. At times this is quite a funny story, with a special appearance by a full-sized, papier-mâché, yellow Maserati rather summing up the ineptness of "Dominic" as he strives for success, but that humour rather quickly evaporates leaving us with a familial drama the can be quite poignant at times as it looks at the restricting roles for women and the hereditary responsibility of sons. Given the professions of the characters, grief is never far away and we focus quiet tenderly at times at just how people come to terms with that - or not, whilst we also try to reconcile just how families themselves change from generation to generation, with some tough decisions having to be made that centre around "Ben" and his need to look forward and not back. The acting is engaging and the dialogue well written, allowing the action to do plenty of the work without subjecting us to a constant surfeit of chatter, and it handles the topic of death and the provisions we make to deal with it and it's aftermath sensitively.
Quality drama and Dayo Wong is brilliant
Giving this an 8/10 rating
Latest from writer director Anselm Chan, and it's a topper, a proper drama about a subject that really does not get screen time. This is a great film by him and a good acting choice by Dayo Wong, who is nothing short of brilliant in everything he is in, but this performance and this role, it's a big ask and pulls it off.
A film about death nd the effects on the living, it must be handled with great care and can be a minefield, add humour and it can be a disaster, this is a almost perfect film that does this right, and there is a lesson to be learnt out of it.
Michael Hui, Michelle Wai and Pak Hon Chu are just so good and play off each other and cause Dayo Wong's character chaos. And he has plenty of that, which causes him all sorts but he grows and grows, and the last act of the film, which is the title, just finishes what is a great film off. The film is playing to packed cinemas here in London, for a good reason, it's got Dayo Wong, on top form, and I will travel to see what he is in.
Latest from writer director Anselm Chan, and it's a topper, a proper drama about a subject that really does not get screen time. This is a great film by him and a good acting choice by Dayo Wong, who is nothing short of brilliant in everything he is in, but this performance and this role, it's a big ask and pulls it off.
A film about death nd the effects on the living, it must be handled with great care and can be a minefield, add humour and it can be a disaster, this is a almost perfect film that does this right, and there is a lesson to be learnt out of it.
Michael Hui, Michelle Wai and Pak Hon Chu are just so good and play off each other and cause Dayo Wong's character chaos. And he has plenty of that, which causes him all sorts but he grows and grows, and the last act of the film, which is the title, just finishes what is a great film off. The film is playing to packed cinemas here in London, for a good reason, it's got Dayo Wong, on top form, and I will travel to see what he is in.
Moving and educational
A nice opportunity to learn something new about Hong Kong traditions and rituals and about Taoism, I actually did a little googling on the topic. The breaking the hell's gates ritual is beautiful and impressive and a little magical. The movie also ends in a little feminist moment which I wasn't expecting but was begging for some reckoning on the women are filthy mantra all along, so that was very satisfactory.
Yuet is a very interesting woman and I wanted more insight into her, which in a way goes for all major players. Surprisingly, it was Dominic, the lead character who is the most mysterious in the end. I wish I could understand him more and find out about his past and Jade.
The movie offers plenty of moments that draw tears from its viewers, with the various people left behind and their complicated relations. But I think the priest's relationship to his children is the core of the movie and I loved how the ending provided closure for them and for us as well. It was in a sense cathartic. I can fully understand why this movie was and still is such a blockbuster in its country of origin. It's complex and complicated and healing. And I liked that there's no shame attached to the profession, unlike in Departures, the Japanese movie. By the way, there's also Lighting Up the Stars, a mainland Chinese movie focused roughly on the same theme.
Yuet is a very interesting woman and I wanted more insight into her, which in a way goes for all major players. Surprisingly, it was Dominic, the lead character who is the most mysterious in the end. I wish I could understand him more and find out about his past and Jade.
The movie offers plenty of moments that draw tears from its viewers, with the various people left behind and their complicated relations. But I think the priest's relationship to his children is the core of the movie and I loved how the ending provided closure for them and for us as well. It was in a sense cathartic. I can fully understand why this movie was and still is such a blockbuster in its country of origin. It's complex and complicated and healing. And I liked that there's no shame attached to the profession, unlike in Departures, the Japanese movie. By the way, there's also Lighting Up the Stars, a mainland Chinese movie focused roughly on the same theme.
My first time writing a review
This one is that kind of movies that linger in your mind, that make you think about life, that give you certain positive impacts.
The casting is great and the acting of the individuals is near perfect.
The movie is good for audience of any religious background, for audience who believe or not the last dance is meaningful for the death, for audience who has good/bad bonding with the family, for audience who is struggling for life, and even for audience who doesn't like going to cinemas.
Hong Kong movie industries have been relying too much on kungfu/gangster stories for the last 10 or even 20 years. This movie is a major break-through while in Asia Korean/Japanese movies have been dominating.
Good job!!
The casting is great and the acting of the individuals is near perfect.
The movie is good for audience of any religious background, for audience who believe or not the last dance is meaningful for the death, for audience who has good/bad bonding with the family, for audience who is struggling for life, and even for audience who doesn't like going to cinemas.
Hong Kong movie industries have been relying too much on kungfu/gangster stories for the last 10 or even 20 years. This movie is a major break-through while in Asia Korean/Japanese movies have been dominating.
Good job!!
¿Sabías que…?
- ConexionesFeatured in Terence Lam: The Last Dance (2024)
- Bandas sonorasThe Last Dance
Performed by Terence Lam
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 20,983,374
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 2h 6min(126 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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