"The Last Station" should have been great, but it settles for being merely good. Despite its impressive cast and juicy subject, something about it just doesn't quite click.
Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren play Leo Tolstoy and his wife in the days leading up to the writer's death, and the tumultuous relationship they shared, she feeling brushed aside by the author because of his commitment to his work and the Tolstoyan movement that developed around it. James MacAvoy plays a young man who scores the job of being Tostoy's assistant and becomes witness to this domestic drama and an unwitting accomplice to the machinations of Tolstoy's close friend and business adviser (Paul Giamatti) to wrest copyright of Tolstoy's works away from his wife upon the writer's death. If all of this sounds like a delicious set up for great acting and suspenseful intrigue, you'd be right; unfortunately, the movie is so much less than what it could have been.
Plummer and Mirren are wonderful in their roles, and the movie's best scenes are the ones of them together. However, they're not in the movie enough, and their relationship, which is the most interesting thing about the story, takes a back seat to the politics of the Tolstoy movement and MacAvoy's reactions to them. MacAvoy is a terrific actor and I've liked him in everything I've seen him in, including this. But I simply didn't care as much about his character as I did Tolstoy and his wife, and I spent the whole film itching for the screenplay to give Plummer and Mirren, two great British actors, more to do.
Paul Giamatti's character is oily and unlikable; indeed, there's something about Giamatti the actor that I find unlikable in general and actually makes it hard for me to watch him. Kerry Condon, on the other hand, in a smaller role as MacAvoy's love interest, is lovely.
Grade: B
The Last Station
2009
Action / Biography / Drama / Romance
The Last Station
2009
Action / Biography / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
The Countess Sofya Andreevna Tolstoy (Dame Helen Mirren),wife and muse to Leo Tolstoy (Christopher Plummer),uses every trick of seduction on her husband's loyal disciple, whom she believes was the person responsible for Tolstoy signing a new will that leaves his work and property to the Russian people.
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You've Got Plummer and Mirren; Now Give Them More to Do
A very enjoyable movie
There is nothing to fault in this movie, really, and pretty much everything to praise.
The script is very good. The characters are fleshed out and developed in complexity as the movie goes along. You continue to learn more about them, see more facets of their character.
And they are realized by first-rate performances. There is not a weak one in the batch.
The direction is also very fine. There is not really much of a plot here; it's more of a character study. Still, the director keeps things moving along, never veering into the sentimental or the cute. You grow to like these characters a lot, but there is no attempt to yank your emotions.
My only very slight reservation about this movie is just a personal preference. I went into it knowing virtually nothing about Tolstoy's life or the movement that was developed out of his later writings. I would have appreciated a little dialogue somewhere explaining more about that. I realize, however, that that is not the norm in modern movies, and I certainly had no problems following what was going on without it. Viewers such as myself will just have to go read a book about Tolstoy for that additional information, which is certainly not a bad thing.
This is not a film for the ages, a Citizen Kane or a Rules of the Game, a Potemkin or such. Still, it is a very well-crafted movie, one that I could easily watch again with no diminished pleasure. One that, as well, I can recommend to anyone who enjoys good acting and watching interesting characters being developed by and through it.
station agency
Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren received Academy Award nominations for their roles as Russian author Lev* Tolstoy and Countess Sofya Tolstaya, respectively. The movie focuses on the "War and Peace" author's last few weeks alive in 1910, and is told through the eyes of young Valentin Bulgakov (James McAvoy),a young secretary sent to work for Tolstoy.
I should say that the portrayal of Sofya's frustration with her husband's dying wishes (to leave his work to the Russian people, thereby leaving her nothing) was pretty over-the-top, but I could understand her feelings. I thought that the movie could have gone into Tolstoy's revolutionary sentiments that he expressed in his novels, but I found it to be a pretty good movie overall. I recommend it.
I should also note that I could hear some mispronunciations. They said soh-FEE-ya an-dray-EV-na, when the correct pronunciation is SOH-fya an-DRAY-ev-na. Also, the word for exit at the end of the movie used the modern spelling without the hard sign (which Russian dropped after the revolution).
But mostly it's a really good movie. Also starring Paul Giamatti, Anne-Marie Duff and Kerry Condon.
*In English, we usually say Leo Tolstoy, but Lev (Russian for "lion") is the name in Russian.