Last Chance Harvey: DVD Review
Last Chance Harvey
Cast: Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Richard Schiff
Rating PG
Warner Bros Home
Video
Lonely divorcee has chance meeting with permanent singleton.
Against the odds, the pair form a friendship and it evolves to a relationship
- but the pair are from other sides of the world - how can their budding romance
survive such insurmountable obstacles?
Granted, it's not the most original idea ever, but Last Chance Harvey just
about manages to pull it off - even if it does dip into heavy schmaltz towards
the end.
Dustin Hoffman is Harvey Shine, a NY based jingle writer, who is on his last
chance with his employers.
With a big deal about to break, Shine has to head to England to see his
estranged daughter marry.
Emma Thompson is Kate Walker, a customer services rep for an airline. Forever
on blind dates and apparently consigned to spinsterhood, she's beset by a
meddling mum whose husband ran off to France with a younger woman. Shine and
Walker meet as he disembarks the plane - and he refuses to answer her
questions.
Later, after being leaving his daughter's wedding early (that's how close ole
Harvey is to the family), he bumps into Kate again.
And in a moment of self loathing and realizing he's lost everything, he
starts to talk to her - and the two of them realize last chances should be
seized - before it's too late.
What is there to say about Last Chance Harvey?
If you're prone to sentimental films and well up with emotion as the human
condition is examined, then this flick is for you.
But it's a couple of very good turns by Hoffman and Thompson which raise this
out of the mire of treacly schmaltz.
Just.
Hoffman's good as the world weary Shine -
despondent after being rejected by a personal and professional world, he conveys
just the right amount of sass and sadness to make his character likeable.
And Thompson puts in an admirable performance as the spinster who's always on
blind dates or being set up by her mother - her breakdown towards the end of the
film is deeply plausible as she faces the very real possibility of being alone
for the rest of her life.
The only cloying part of this film is a sub plot involving Kate's mother and
her new Polish neighbour - which exploits every possible racial stereotype
concerning foreigners and has an extremely predictable outcome.
Rating: 6/10
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
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