The Last Supper Reviews
I Love the New Biblical movies. Great Cinematography along with more realistic versions. These were all just normal people, Like Us. Who would have guessed? Besides Jesus.
It’s a really good movie
I really liked how the actors got into their roles so well. I think that people watching the movie and other people really liked the fact that he is so naturally and elegantly immersed in his role.
In my opinion, I felt that the movie was very good, behind all this, the filmmaker was able to come up with the right festive details to congratulate the members of the behind-the-scenes team.
I really liked the talented actors
I never thought Chinese movies are this good.
Love the chinese movie type especially in ancient vibe
This movie is pure garbage. Sadly the left acts this crazy
Superb super dark comedy. Bloody and funny. The Bill Paxton scene is absolutely hysterical.
3.7 I actually loved the concept and most the guests involved but how the heck did they get a highschool senior over and why were they even considering that
The last supper with friends can be very nice or unintentionally end with murder. Directed by Stacy Title and a large ensemble cast; Annabeth Gish, a young Cameron Diaz, Courtney B. Vance, Jason Alexander, Ron Perlman, Bill Paxton, Mark Harmon, and Elizabeth Moss. These grad students are good friends but when they invite the newest guest, Zack he starts sharing too much of his Neo-Nazi ideals. He's a patriot who feels everyone else laughed when he put himself on the field. So one of them kills Zack and now the rest of them have to handle the situation best they can. This turns into a quirky comedy of dinner conversations, politics, and opinions clashing. It's an odd but funny black comedy. Not all the narratives work but it does look at some moral dilemmas.
Featuring the darkest of dark humor, The Last Supper is a biting satire dealing with the moral superiority felt by individuals on both the extreme left and the extreme right of the political and social spectrum. A group of five left-leaning graduate students decide that it would be in society's best interest if they, at a weekly dinner party, start killing those who oppose their ideologies. Before you know it, the backyard is filled with graves and the tomatoes are growing like never before. The Last Supper has a great cast, more than its fair share of uncomfortable laughs, and a fantastic premise that will no doubt stir up conversation, but is hindered by the fact that it starts to become a bit repetitive around the midway point and, as a result, loses a bit of momentum.
This script is written with deep understanding of political mechanisms, though-provoking, non-cliche and an absolute fun to watch. It is perhaps much more valid globally today than in 1995. Someone should definitely recover it from archives and broadcast publicly. If only all Hollywood movies had this level of insight in them, the world would be a better place than it is today :).
Clearly underrated since I'd never heard of it and it's a lot better than many others I've reviewed.
The premise of this movie was good but it seemed to lose its direction early on. The " victims" set up the situation for good laughs but the dialog from the kitchen table group was unwitty and predictable. Best part of the movie was the priest delivering a moral tirade amidst his delight of various foods ont the table.
Low budget, well cast black comedy about killing conservatives to make the world a better place. It's not great, but it's good enough. Young Cameron Diaz and sexy Jonathan Penner stand out.