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Suicide Club

Original title: The Last Time I Committed Suicide
  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Keanu Reeves, Claire Forlani, and Thomas Jane in Suicide Club (1997)
The Last Time I Committed Suicide: Playing Pool
Play clip1:59
Watch The Last Time I Committed Suicide: Playing Pool
1 Video
99+ Photos
BiographyDramaRomance

In 1946 Denver, an aspiring writer who enjoys irresponsible adventures with his friend writes a letter about his life before and after the suicide attempt by his sad, commitment-seeking girl... Read allIn 1946 Denver, an aspiring writer who enjoys irresponsible adventures with his friend writes a letter about his life before and after the suicide attempt by his sad, commitment-seeking girlfriend.In 1946 Denver, an aspiring writer who enjoys irresponsible adventures with his friend writes a letter about his life before and after the suicide attempt by his sad, commitment-seeking girlfriend.

  • Director
    • Stephen Kay
  • Writers
    • Neal Cassady
    • Stephen Kay
  • Stars
    • Thomas Jane
    • Keanu Reeves
    • Adrien Brody
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Kay
    • Writers
      • Neal Cassady
      • Stephen Kay
    • Stars
      • Thomas Jane
      • Keanu Reeves
      • Adrien Brody
    • 29User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Last Time I Committed Suicide: Playing Pool
    Clip 1:59
    The Last Time I Committed Suicide: Playing Pool

    Photos126

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Thomas Jane
    Thomas Jane
    • Neal Cassady
    Keanu Reeves
    Keanu Reeves
    • Harry
    Adrien Brody
    Adrien Brody
    • Ben
    John Doe
    John Doe
    • Lewis
    Claire Forlani
    Claire Forlani
    • Joan
    Jim Haynie
    • Jerry
    Marg Helgenberger
    Marg Helgenberger
    • Lizzy
    Lucinda Jenney
    Lucinda Jenney
    • Rosie Trickle
    Gretchen Mol
    Gretchen Mol
    • Mary Greenway
    Pat McNamara
    Pat McNamara
    • Father Fletcher
    Kate Williamson
    Kate Williamson
    • Nurse Waring
    Cristine Rose
    Cristine Rose
    • Mrs. Greenway
    • (as Christine Rose)
    Meadow Sisto
    • Sarah
    Amy Smart
    Amy Smart
    • Jeananne
    Alexandra Holden
    Alexandra Holden
    • Vicky
    Clark Gregg
    Clark Gregg
    • Cop #1
    Joe Charbanic
    Joe Charbanic
    • Cop #2
    Edward Bates
    Edward Bates
    • Player #1
    • Director
      • Stephen Kay
    • Writers
      • Neal Cassady
      • Stephen Kay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    5.42.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10keanuette

    A brilliant adaptation!

    Seeing that the whole movie is based on a letter from Neal Cassidy to Jack Kerouac, I reckon Stephen Kay did an excellent job of re-creating the essence that was Cassidy and his neer-do-well existence.

    You felt for Neal (played very well by Thomas Jane ). He could almost taste the sweetness of a well balanced life - the honey at home the white picket fence the dog running around in the yard, but circumstance (his likings for the female of the species, penchant for stealing cars and his friendship with good 'ol HARRY [played brilliantly by KEANU REEVES]), just got in the way of true happiness.

    The supporting cast give good all round performances, especially Claire Forlani as the girl of Cassidy's 'dreams'.

    This movie catches the 'beat' excellently with great visuals and a Class A soundtrack.

    Highly recommended.
    Thomasu

    Godesses and Poetry

    "The Last Time I Committed Suicide" is an excellent description of live of a beatnick in the 50s. Thomas Jane does a good performance in a quaint leading roll, but he is duly overshadowed by the young rising Godesses of Hollywood; namely Claire Forlani and Gretchen Mol. These two girls have seen their careers boom as of late much due to their looks and screen sensuality. This bunch of new talent has one advantage over Keanu Reeves, who takes on a minor part in this movie. They are not yet typecast. Keanu did well for himself considering. However, what struck me the most was the mood portrayed in the movie. It was calm yet restless, poetic yet true to life. When we add the excellent choice of music we have a movie worthy a life at the top shelf.
    jemmytee

    Get this director a valium, PLEASE!

    You know, normally when you have a good script and excellent

    actors on your project, you can turn out something decent, good or

    great...even when you, as the director, believe you're talented and

    think you know what you're doing. But so far as "The Last Time I

    Committed Suicide" is concerned, Stephen T. Kay flat out ruined

    this movie, and it is damn near unforgivable.

    Here we have a screenplay filled with some of the most wonderful

    dialog you can imagine being delivered by a troupe of wonderful

    actors. Thomas Jane gives a star making turn as Neal Cassady,

    and he is backed up with a startlingly naturalistic and cozy turn by

    Keanu Reeves as his drunk buddy, Harry. But could you enjoy the

    beautiful rhythm of their work? Noooooooooo. By God, Mr. Kay

    was going to remind you every step of the way that he is

    DIRECTING this film and you are going to pay attention to that fact,

    come hell or high water.

    I mean, here we have a quiet intense drama about a charismatic

    man who inspired people like Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsberg,

    and the director uses every trick in "The MTV Bible of Pseudo

    Filmography" to hide that fact and (supposedly) make it palatable

    for the ADD generation. You got your jump cuts and edits every .9

    seconds and odd angles and pretty inserts and on and on and on

    until I finally wanted to scream at the screen, "Take a F*****G

    valium!" Drama has to unfold; it cannot be force fed down your

    gullet because the man making the movie thinks you're too easily

    distracted to give a damn about the characters.

    I've only seen one other movie where the director completely

    destroyed a wonderful script -- "A Chorus of Disapproval"

    (although if "While You Were Sleeping" had had any other actress

    in the lead besides Sandra Bullock, it would also fit in this cursed

    category).

    So...if you like your drama spit out in food fight fashion, then this is

    the movie for you. But if you want anything approaching reality,

    check out something like "La Dolce Vita" by Federico Fellini, who

    has more style in his right pinkie than in all of Stephen T. Kay's

    body.
    reiben

    such life!

    "this was not the last time I committed suicide..." That's such an amazing line. It's all about how you make certain choices that could make the world of difference in your future, how the road you have just chosen to take might not be the one that you most want -- but for some reason you take it anyways. That by one choice, you are killing a life that you might've had. It's a great movie! And the ending is wonderful! It's so bittersweet, so honest. It makes me wish that things were as easy as they were then. That like Neal Cassady, I could just drop everything, hop into a stolen car, and ride away --- doesn't matter where, just away.
    7Lechuguilla

    Offbeat

    To appreciate this film the viewer needs either to be in a jazzy, rebellious sort of mood, or have some interest in Neal Cassady, an American who figured heavily in the development of the "beat generation" of the 1950s.

    Set in the 1940s during one notable period of Cassady's life, the film is mostly a character study of Cassady (Thomas Jane), and his relationship with other people in his life, including his friend Harry (Keanu Reeves) and various romantic interests, the central one being Joan (Claire Forlani).

    But Cassady was a quirky kind of guy, a rebel, a nonconformist, fun loving, with a restless energy, a person constantly on the move, both physically and philosophically. As presented in the film, he is a cross between James Dean and Jim Morrison.

    Cassady's offbeat personality is mirrored in the film's offbeat style. It's shot partly in color and partly in B&W. Plot structure seems deliberately chaotic, frenetic, loose. Jump cuts can be jarring for viewers expecting a smoothly flowing, linear plot. And the tone alternates between silly and philosophical. Background music is mostly jazz with some blues thrown in. Accordingly, a lot of viewers will find the film's unorthodox style off-putting.

    But I liked it, for the most part. The plot would have been stronger if it had focused on Cassady's 1950s relationship with other historical figures, like Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, instead of his romances with random women. Otherwise, the cinematography, the music, and the performance of Thomas Jane are terrific.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The letter on which this movie is based was referred to by its author Neal Cassady, and its recipient Jack Kerouac as "the Joan Anderson letter" (even though the only extant fragment more prominently and dramatically dealt with a different girlfriend of Neal's at the time, nicknamed Cherry Mary). This letter, written in December 1950 about events in Cassady's life from the summer through Christmas of 1945, was "lost" circa 1954 and 1955. But before that happened, a 5,000-word fragment (on which this movie is based) had been copied (retyped) likely by Kerouac himself, and was subsequently published in 1964 in a small San Francisco literary magazine called "Notes From Underground", then again later in Cassady's posthumous autobiography "The First Third" (beginning "To have seen a specter isn't everything ..."). The entire 16,000-word letter by Cassady - which Kerouac had praised as a turning point in his approach to writing - was never seen again after 1955 - and consequently became something of a Holy Grail in the Beat world. Miraculously, in 2012, the entire letter was found after nearly sixty years in old boxes that had been stored since being rescued from the Sausalito publisher Golden Goose's garbage when it folded in 1955. It's set for auction on December 17, 2014.
    • Goofs
      Dianne Reeves wasn't born until 1956 but her "Jingle Bells" is used in the soundtrack.
    • Quotes

      Neal Cassady: One startled look and I knew, I was right back where I'd started.

    • Crazy credits
      The film is introduced with these sentences:

      A man's life is merely a collection of events, building one upon the other. When all the events are tallied: the triumphs; the failures; the mistakes, their sum makes up the man.

      These are but a few events in the life of "Superman".
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Face/Off/Dream with the Fishes/Head Above Water/The Last Time I Committed Suicide/When the Cat's Away (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Better Get It in Your Soul
      Written by Charles Mingus

      Performed by Charles Mingus

      Courtesy of Columbia Records

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    FAQ19

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    • A NOTE ABOUT SPOILERS

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 2001 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Last Time I Committed Suicide
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bates Entertainment
      • Tapestry Films
      • The Kushner-Locke Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $46,362
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $12,836
      • Jun 22, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $46,362
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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