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Review of a highly affective film noir


Review from Salem Film Festival

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http://kolson-kevinsblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/salem-film-festival-overview-of-opening.html

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"The final film of the night was the real surprise, and I think ultimate winner, of the festival. Jeffery Goodman: The Last Lullaby. Tom Sizemore stars as a "retired" and weary hitman who can't sleep, stumbles upon an opportunity to make some money which dominoes into events that get him more and more involved with someone he is supposed to kill. The film is a highly affective small town neo-noir in the vein of Blood Simple, Red Rock West, and 2007's The Lookout. There's also a nice homage to John Boorman's noir classic Point Blank. Sizemore still has the chops to act, and the look of the film is gorgeous as we were treated to a pristine 35mm print made solely for the Salem Film Festival. The film doesn't rely on the clichés of the thriller; rather, it has fun with the conventions and motifs of noir: the weary protagonist, the man who gets in too deep, ambiguity, etc. There's a great shootout scene that is intelligent and relies on silence and smarts, rather than guns blazing. It's films like this that get me excited about the fact there are still filmmakers out there who realize that, when making a film like this, subdued and classical film techniques are always going to trump the "in-the-moment" action style found in most movies containing shootouts. The violence in The Last Lullaby is shocking, not because it's ultra violent, but because the loudness of gun bursts always breaks the comforts of silence. It's an amazing film that succeeds in existing in that kind of no man's land found in sorta-commerical, sorta-indie films like In Bruges and the aforementioned The Lookout."

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I just saw the film in it's last festival, On Location: Memphis International Film Festival. The Last Lullaby was great! It kept you on the edge of you seat. I highly reccommend seeing this film. It opens this weekend in theaters (starting in Shreveport, LA). I'd see it again if it comes back to theaters in my area.

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