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IMDbPro

The Last Shot

  • 2004
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33min
NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
4,4 k
MA NOTE
Matthew Broderick, Alec Baldwin, Ray Liotta, Toni Collette, Calista Flockhart, Tony Shalhoub, Tim Blake Nelson, and James Rebhorn in The Last Shot (2004)
CT #2 Post
Lire trailer2:21
5 Videos
34 photos
ComédieRomanceSatire

The Last Shot est une comédie qui égratigne les mondes du cinéma, de la mafia et du FBI.The Last Shot est une comédie qui égratigne les mondes du cinéma, de la mafia et du FBI.The Last Shot est une comédie qui égratigne les mondes du cinéma, de la mafia et du FBI.

  • Réalisation
    • Jeff Nathanson
  • Scénario
    • Steve Fishman
    • Jeff Nathanson
  • Casting principal
    • Matthew Broderick
    • Alec Baldwin
    • Toni Collette
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,7/10
    4,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jeff Nathanson
    • Scénario
      • Steve Fishman
      • Jeff Nathanson
    • Casting principal
      • Matthew Broderick
      • Alec Baldwin
      • Toni Collette
    • 39avis d'utilisateurs
    • 42avis des critiques
    • 47Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos5

    The Last Shot
    Trailer 2:21
    The Last Shot
    The Last Shot
    Clip 1:15
    The Last Shot
    The Last Shot
    Clip 1:15
    The Last Shot
    The Last Shot
    Clip 0:40
    The Last Shot
    The Last Shot
    Clip 1:23
    The Last Shot
    The Last Shot
    Clip 0:46
    The Last Shot

    Photos34

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    Rôles principaux80

    Modifier
    Matthew Broderick
    Matthew Broderick
    • Steven Schats
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Joe Devine
    Toni Collette
    Toni Collette
    • Emily French
    Tony Shalhoub
    Tony Shalhoub
    • Tommy Sanz
    Calista Flockhart
    Calista Flockhart
    • Valerie Weston
    Tim Blake Nelson
    Tim Blake Nelson
    • Marshal Paris
    Buck Henry
    Buck Henry
    • Lonnie Bosco
    Ray Liotta
    Ray Liotta
    • Jack Devine
    Ian Gomez
    Ian Gomez
    • Agent Nance
    Troy Winbush
    Troy Winbush
    • Agent Ray Dawson
    Tom McCarthy
    Tom McCarthy
    • Agent Pike
    W. Earl Brown
    W. Earl Brown
    • Willie Gratzo
    Evan Jones
    Evan Jones
    • Troy Haines
    Glenn Morshower
    Glenn Morshower
    • Agent McCaffrey
    James Rebhorn
    James Rebhorn
    • Abe White
    Amy Smallman
    • Heidi Katz
    Michael Papajohn
    Michael Papajohn
    • Ed Rossi, Jr.
    Jon Polito
    Jon Polito
    • Wally Kamin
    • Réalisation
      • Jeff Nathanson
    • Scénario
      • Steve Fishman
      • Jeff Nathanson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs39

    5,74.4K
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    Avis à la une

    6blanche-2

    silly fun

    From 2004, "The Last Shot" is one crazy movie, with comedy ranging from stupid to silly to hilarious. The movie stars Alec Baldwin, Matthew Broderick, Calista Flockhart, Tony Shaloub, Toni Collete, Ray Liotta, and Joan Cusack. Baldwin is Joe Devine, an FBI agent who thinks the way to capture a big mob boss is to deal with the Teamsters by pretending to be producing a film in Rhode Island. The script he gets from a fledgling writer Steven Schats (Broderick) is called Arizona and is based on the tragic death of his sister Charlotte. Of course, he first has to get Schatz to change the location and a few other things.

    Before you know it, the fake filmmaking becomes real as Devine gets into producing and convinces the FBI that they can capture even more mobsters by actually doing the film. Soon the FBI offers him a three-picture deal.

    Some of the dialogue is the funniest stuff you'll ever hear, and some of the situations are hilarious. Everyone is excellent, but Toni Collette as insane movie star Emily French is a standout, as is Cusack as a Hollywood agent and Tony Shalhoub as the badly scarred mobster they're after, who says, "My wife set fire to me while I was asleep. Six months later, our marriage fell apart." Parts of this film were laugh out loud funny, a highlight being Collette's audition as well as the opening scene of the film, an FBI sting, and Cusack's talk to the people who are going to work on the film.

    Some people will not like "The Last Shot" at all, but it's really worth seeing for the fun it pokes at the film business, for the performances, and some great quotes.
    9BrandtSponseller

    Someone point the radar back at this film

    The Last Shot is a quirky, enjoyable art-house comedy based on the true story of an FBI agent, Garland Schweickhardt, who was in charge of an elaborate operation named "Dramex" to nab mob influences in the film business.

    The Schweickhardt character in the film is named Joe Devine (Alec Baldwin). After a brief character establishing scene and an amazing title/opening credits sequence (featuring movie theater objects) that's one of the most creative and cute ones I've seen yet, Devine is transferred to the Providence, Rhode Island FBI office and learns of Tommy Sanz' (Tony Shalhoub) illegal mob dealings with the local teamsters. He figures that the best way to bust Sanz is to set up a fake film shoot and try to get him to make a deal to avoid having to use (and more importantly pay for) union truckers. So Devine, who knows next to nothing about the film business, poses as a producer and heads to Hollywood.

    He gets a crash course in the industry from insider Fanny Nash (Joan Cusack in a hilarious extended cameo), and he begins his search for a script and director. Enter struggling screenwriter Steven Schats (Matthew Broderick), who has a day job as a ticket taker at Mann's Chinese Theater and who lives next to a noisy (of course) dog kennel, a fact that profoundly annoys his struggling actress girlfriend, Valerie Weston (Calista Flockhart). Schats has been shopping his script, "Arizona", for a number of years to no avail. Devine sets up a meeting with him and immediately offers him a deal, including casting power, final cut and points. Of course Schats jumps on the deal.

    There's only one problem. The script calls primarily for location shots in the desert, including Hopi Indian cave scenes. It's integral to the story. But Devine insists that they shoot in Rhode Island. The bulk of The Last Shot hinges on a few different conflicts, including the FBI's reservations about Devine's plan, which keeps snowballing and turning into a more far reaching lie.

    Although it's not every day that the FBI sets up a bogus film production, director and writer Jeff Nathanson uses his debut film as a helmer to comment on various levels of the typical craziness of the movie business. Devine's FBI superiors function as executive producers who are regularly perplexed about where their money is going, but who are easily enough talked into furthering their support as Devine pitches additional time and resources they need to acquire. On a more literal level, Nathanson is also able to spoof agents, directors, actors, and many processes, such as location scouting and casting. Much of this material is hilarious, and viewers do not need to have any intimacy with the film industry to "get it", or to get that there is probably a lot more truth to these scenes than is usually admitted.

    The cast is excellent, including Baldwin and Broderick. They may not be the first two names many cineastes would think of when they imagine an art-house film propelled by humorous but poignant performances, but The Last Shot just shows why such conventional wisdom views are off the track. A lot of sizable stars take roles with far less screen time than normal--including Shalhoub, Flockhart and Ray Liotta, but this is a well-written script that turned out to be well directed, so it was a good move for them.

    At the same time that Nathanson enables a somewhat sarcastic, cynical view of the film-making process, there is a parallel plot featuring Devine that emphasizes a much more romantic view of the lure of the business. It becomes increasingly clear as The Last Shot unfolds that Devine is no longer concerned with just or even primarily nabbing mobsters. He's trying to plunge deeper into making his "fake" feature because he's falling in love with the idea of film-making. There's a particular line of dialogue delivered by one of Devine's superiors in the FBI, having to do with continuing Devine's project, that is not only a hilarious line in context, it's virtually the climax of the film. Devine has triumphed. The sham has become not what he tells Schats, but what he tells his supervisors. The subsequent conclusion of the film is thus heartwarming and a bit melancholy/tragic at the same time. It's a nice change of pace from more stereotypically "Hollywood" endings.

    This is a very good, near-excellent film that has not received the attention it deserves. Although there is an art-house atmosphere to it, it's really more of a mainstream film that should have opened wide in multiplexes with a big publicity campaign. I never even noticed the film on its theatrical release, and I live in New York City and usually pay attention to what's playing the art-house theaters. I only noticed the DVD through my weekly scouring of release schedules to make sure I don't miss anything. Give it a chance and make sure you tell a friend or two about it.
    Tony-Shafton

    Going from the sublime to the ridiculous makes for laughs and fun

    This is a brilliant small budget movie that deserves much more buzz and play that it has received. It is similar in plot structure to Joseph Heller's Catch 22.

    Both start out with an odd but "realistic" beginning. Each progresses in small steps to more and more outlandish and unbelievable situations with a blurred line between possible and "this can't really be happening."

    In Catch 22, the story begins with an odd but possible situation in the European theater in World War II. At the end of the story Milo Minderbinder, an American officer, is contracting with both the Germany and the Allies to bomb the other's military installations.

    In the Last Shot, the story begins Baldwin, an FBI agent trying to make a name for himself, voluntarily allowing the bad guys to cut of one of his fingers so that he can charge the bad guys with more serious crimes.

    The plot progresses with Baldwin setting up a façade of making a movie to trap other Mafia types. Obviously, no one expects that the movie will ever be made. It then progresses to a point where Baldwin and his superiors at the FBI are making what appears to be a real deal for a "three picture deal" and negotiating over marketing rights.

    That progression, together with some wonderful side trips,cameos by Joan Cusack and Buck Henry, caused something that is rarely heard in multiplex theaters with relatively small audiences-outright loud laughter and even a bit of applause as the movie ended.

    This movie is not Gone with the Wind or Citizen Kane. It is just good fun with laughs enhanced by the progression of not likely but possible to outright absurdity. The kicker is that the movie, according to the producers was based on a true story. If so truth may really be stranger than fiction.
    7FilmFan777

    Better than expected, go see it

    This was funnier than we thought it would be, we really enjoyed it. It's no Matrix or Shawshank but it's not supposed to be. As far as comedies go, it was creatively warm and mostly...entertaining throughout! (which is hard these days to find in most films)

    Everyone did a good job with some good chemistry. Broderick was perfect for this role and I'm finding Alec Baldwin, (personal opinions aside), is becoming an actor I really appreciate in these types of roles so good for him. So, if it looks the 'least' bit interesting to you, then go and see it, I bet you'll enjoy it. Support a good lil film that has much more to offer you then most of the packaged crap out there.
    8jotix100

    The making of "Arizona" in Rhode Island

    Some satires about the process of making movies point out to the craziness that process creates among the people involved, which is the idea behind "The Last Shot". It also depicts how most projects go through transformations the people that wrote them, as different people that know nothing about movies get involved.

    Jeff Nathanson, the director and screen play writer of this funny movie has clear ideas about the concept that too many cooks spoil the broth. He has combined two different elements in his conception of the film. On the one level, there is the FBI investigation on racketeers and on the other, he brings a man who yearns to direct movies into the picture by offering him a phony deal in which supposedly a film is going to be produced, but only as a cover up to trap a mafioso in Rhode Island.

    The idea of recruiting Steven Schats, an employee of the Graunman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood to direct his film "Arizona", is something that Joe Devine, an FBI man, dreams to get the results he wants. The film, which makes no sense at all, undergoes a change when Joe tells Steven the production will be shot in Providence, in order to take advantage of a deal with that state's cooperation with the movie industry. The young director gets horrified when he discovers how dissimilar the new location is in comparison with the real Arizona.

    The plot gets complicated as Tommy Sanz, the mafioso who decides to cooperate in letting the movie company use the trucks he controls, to the production company in exchange of an executive producer credit in the movie. The arrival of Emily French, an actress of obscure talent, but with great physical attributes, contribute to create more confusion in the preparation of the movie. Also, Steven's girlfriend, Valerie, and his brother, Marshal, show up to make matters worse.

    Alec Baldwin plays Joe Devine, the producer with great charm. Matthew Broderick also has an opportunity to shine in the movie. The wonderful Toni Collette appears as the sexy Emily French in great form. Tony Shalhoub is seen as Tommy Sanz, the racketeer. Calista Flockhart, Tim Blake Nelson, Buck Henry, James Rebhorn, do good work in the film. Joan Cusack makes the most of her character and a cameo by Ray Liotta round up the familiar faces in the movie.

    "The Last Shot" is a delightful movie to watch as it's clear the director, Jeff Nathanson, clearly understands what make these people tick.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This movie was based on the real life FBI sting operation in the 1980s to infiltrate the Boston mob teamsters. An FBI agent went undercover as a movie studio executive and contracted George Moffly, an aspiring filmmaker, to create it. Throughout the whole time George had no idea that he was making a fake movie. The sting only captured a few minor Mob members. The details of this unusual story can be found in a GQ article (March 2000).
    • Gaffes
      The same extras playing tourists, wearing the same clothes (notably a woman with a fringed leather jacket), can be seen watching the "Ponderosa" theme park show, in two different scenes supposedly months apart.
    • Citations

      Joe Devine: Have you actually seen a person die, watched them bleed to death, seen them take their last breath? I've seen that... many times.

      Steven Schats: Why have you seen that?

      Joe Devine: I used to produce music videos.

    • Crédits fous
      In the middle of the closing credits, a scene with Steven is shown where he has a new girlfriend, a deaf one this time to tackle the "barking dog" problem.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Celebrated: Alec Baldwin (2015)
    • Bandes originales
      No me quieras tanto
      Written by Rafael Hernández (as Rafael Hernandez)

      Performed by Los Panchos (as Trios Los Panchos)

      Courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment, S.A. de C.V.

      By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Last Shot?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 novembre 2004 (Brésil)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Providence
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rhode Island, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Mandeville Films
      • Morra, Brezner, Steinberg and Tenenbaum Entertainment (MBST)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 464 275 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 164 801 $US
      • 26 sept. 2004
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 541 330 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 33min(93 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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