Metacritic Film

Last Kiss, The

Starring Stefano Accorsi, Giovanna Mezzogiorno, Stefania Sandrelli, Marco Cocci, Pierfrancesco Favino, Sabrina Impacciatore, Regina Orioli, and Giorgio Pasotti

MPAA RATING: R for language, sexuality and some drug use

ThinkFilm Inc.
Romance
117 minutes | Color
Italy
Released In Theaters August 2, 2002

Carlo's life is thrown into a tailspin when his longtime girlfriend Giulia announces she's pregnant.

WRITTEN BY
Gabriele Muccino (also story)

DIRECTED BY
Gabriele Muccino

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

65 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Baltimore Sun
Stops your heart and keeps your belly jiggling with laughter. It's an improbably sunny tragicomedy.
100 The New Yorker
An Altman-influenced movie made without the master's acrid bitterness. The Last Kiss may come out of Italian opera and comedy, but in spirit it's Shakespearean -- objective, impassive, and at peace with a world in which men and women manage to be both ordinary and extraordinary. [5 August 2002, p.80]
91 Entertainment Weekly
A crowd-pleaser in the deepest sense, mixes heartbreak and happiness together until you don't even want to see them apart.
90 Variety
Craftily combining elements that speak directly to three different generations, this accomplished ensemble piece is shaping up to be the surprise homegrown hit of the season.
88 Boston Globe Jules Verdone
More movies should be so funny and perceptive, with writing this sharp and acting this believable.
88 Chicago Tribune
While Last Kiss may strike some as a calculated crowd-pleaser, it's cleverly calculated, perceptive and often quite funny -- and a bit darker than it may first appear.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
In the end, The Last Kiss holds less a cynical view of the matrimonial state than one of considered irony.
80 New York Magazine
It's a frisky, funny roundelay starring Stefania Sandrelli, and it features enough shouting and arm-waving to power a windmill.
80 Rolling Stone
Think "Sex and the City" with men, only in Italian and with lots more hollering and hand gestures.
75 Portland Oregonian
You get to know each person just well enough to compare them, allowing you to judge as you like; the film, nicely, refrains from moralizing.
75 New York Daily News
Both a witty ode to and a poignant lament for the choices we make.
70 The New York Times
Provides more than enough sentimental catharsis for a satisfying evening at the multiplex.
70 Washington Post
It's not Fellini, by any means, but it's lively. Never stops moving, even though it crashes into cliches along the way.
70 LA Weekly Dan Fienberg
The air of self-imposed misery can dampen the film's humor, but Muccino never stays still long enough for the emotions to become leaden, and the strong cast carries the film to its striking, bittersweet conclusion.
70 Los Angeles Times
Its portrait of the many ways we can complicate our romantic lives may have a few serious moments, but it's intended to go down easy, and that's what it does.
63 Charlotte Observer
The vigorous, unsubtle acting provides consistent pleasure, once you stop expecting it to seem realistic.
63 New York Post
Walking a tightrope between high farce and emotional truth, writer-director Gabriele Muccino's breathlessly paced Italian comedy The Last Kiss manages to stay just this side of melodrama.
60 Chicago Reader Hank Sartin
Almost frantically intercutting between the characters, the movie spends so much energy trying to charm us that when the emotional stakes are raised we're too exhausted to care.
60 New Times (L.A.)
It's the usual struggle of growing up and growing old, but Muccino's twists are plucky and revealing when he's not suffocating us with heavy-handed mortality and pathos.
60 Film Threat
Makes a good chick flick for guys who want to appear artsy by taking their date to a foreign language film. Just remember: front row...and don't forget the aspirin.
60 TV Guide
Even the film's ironic ending is deftly handled, its cynicism is tempered by a certain rueful wisdom.
50 Salon.com
It's in no way a stupid movie. The trouble is that there's only so much emotional energy you can expend on these assholes before you start wondering why you're paying attention to them at all.
50 Chicago Sun-Times
The message behind all of this is difficult to nail down. Mars and Venus? Adults who haven't grown up? The last fling syndrome? Doing what you want instead of doing what you must?
50 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Stephen Cole
Though credibly performed and photographed, it's hard to care about a film that proposes as epic tragedy the plight of a callow rich boy who is forced to choose between his beautiful, self-satisfied 22-year-old girlfriend and an equally beautiful, self-satisfied 18-year-old mistress.
40 Austin Chronicle
The film's "never grow up" refrain plays like a broken record, until, in an abrupt (but not unexpected) turnaround at film's end, it fixes itself.
30 Village Voice
The director knows how to apply textural gloss, but his portrait of sex-as-war is strictly sitcom.
30 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Through it all, Muccino piles on one shrill confrontation after another. At times, he seems headed for the melodramatic turf owned and operated by Pedro Almodóvar, but where the young Almodóvar would have deployed a prankish wit and the older Almodóvar scraped toward the humanity beneath.

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