Une brigade de soldats est coincée dans une base militaire abandonnée sur une Terre d'un futur proche, en attendant la relève ou l'ennemi, selon ce qui se présente en premier.Une brigade de soldats est coincée dans une base militaire abandonnée sur une Terre d'un futur proche, en attendant la relève ou l'ennemi, selon ce qui se présente en premier.Une brigade de soldats est coincée dans une base militaire abandonnée sur une Terre d'un futur proche, en attendant la relève ou l'ennemi, selon ce qui se présente en premier.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires et 2 nominations au total
Avis à la une
I just mention that because a couple of the people involved in the making of this have bizarrely claimed the set up of two small remaining patches of dry land is a "warning" due to climate change, when that is absurd.
The general human premise, of an distant rare and isolated military or colonial outpost or outposts, though would be a better premise and has served a lot of good literature. Greek poet Constantine Cavafy long form poem served as inspiration for the novel "Tartar Steppe" and the recent "Waiting for the Barbarians" with Johnny Depp, Mark Rylance and Robert Pattinson.
Those are good treatments of this idea. This dumbed down "Last Sentinel" is just mind numbingly bad. The plot twists become tedious, and in fact are so telegraphed as to be cringe. No one in the film can act. And you will be checking your watch every five minutes as more and more boring and pointless filler plods by.
3/10.
The inspiration for this must be those WWII anti-aircraft platforms off the Britain coast. That's a good start although I would be more excited if they shot a few scenes on location. The premise intrigued me for a half hour or so. I stayed with the movie for another hour. It starts losing steam over the second hour and really loses me towards the end. The plot really can't support a two hour runtime.
The reason I found myself glued to the screen was the great directing by Tanel Toom, the excellent cinematography, the spot-on score, and the convincing performances by all the cast. All of that combined with a very intriguing screenplay, made the pacing bearable and time started to fly, as much was happening from scene to scene, so that the suspense and tension was constant, and I was hooked and curious as to what would happen next.
Up until the last half hour, I was also really impressed with Malachi Smyth's screenplay, as he kept giving only the right amount of bits of information about his four characters, their environment and their situation. I was excited to see how this film would resolve and end. Then in the last half hour of the film, it's like a fifth grade drama class stepped in and completed the screenplay instead of Smyth.
The film built-up great foundations, but ultimately it closes off with too little in the plot department, when the film's world gives ample options and opportunities to close-out in grandeur. Everything in the last half hour became convoluted, previous questions were never answered, especially the big one - what exactly was that round device and what's it supposed to do? Then the story devolves with an inane climactic twist riddled with plot holes that falls flat, made little sense with rational thought, and took away all the build-up and suspense I had in the first two acts. What a huge let down, and a waste of starting to watch this film, only to invest all that time for a ridiculous and nonsense ending. Writing doesn't get much lazier than that. It's like ordering a banana split supreme, waiting as they make it, and being handed a sour grape instead.
That's a real shame, because this was a visually stunning film, well shot, directed and performed, especially considering the small budget and fixed sets and location. It's a generous 6/10, all for the film's esthetics and performances, but could've easily been an 8/10 had the ending not been so lazily written, convoluted and unsatisfying.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe structure in this film is derived from a single tower of the Maunsell army forts built in groups of seven to defend the Thames Estuary and River Thames ports during WWII. The Red Sands group and six of the seven Shivering Sands towers remain, as of this movie's release.
- GaffesWhen loading the howitzer as the unmanned ship approaches, the shells clearly have no primers or projectiles. They are just empty cases, unable to fire.
- Citations
[first lines]
Cassidy: [narrating] Darkness and light. Evil and good. War and peace. Them and us. Everyone knows that one could not exist without the other. And between to two, there is a balance.
Cassidy: Some say that before the lands disappeared, birds were able to migrate between the continents. They used a wind called uplift. You don't have to flap your wings to stay up. But you also don't fall. You stay in the middle effortlessly, resting in the air.
Cassidy: But there are no uplift winds any more, because we ruined the balance.
- Bandes originalesOld MacDonald Had a Farm
(uncredited)
Lyrics by Frederick Thomas Nettlingham
(traditional children's song and nursery rhyme)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Last Sentinel?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Last Sentinel
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 143 704 $US
- Durée1 heure 57 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1