Last Resort Movie Review
Last Resort Review

"Last Resort" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul PavlikovskyProducer : Ruth Caleb
Screenwiter : Rowan Joffe,Paul Pavlikovsky
Starring : Dina Korzun,Artiom Strelnikov,Paddy Considine,Lindsey Honey,Dave Bean,Perry Benson,Adrian Scarborough,Bruce Byron
It's hard to imagine a more horrific modern-day nightmare. A young and
wide-eyed Russian lass named Tanya (Dina Korzun) flies to Britain with her
young son Artiom (Artiom Strelnikov) on the promise that her British fiancée
will pick them up from the airport and whisk them off to a new and happy life
together in the West.
When hubby-to-be doesn't show up, Tanya declares herself a refugee to avoid
being immediately sent back to Moscow, then finds herself imprisoned in an
urban gulag -- actually an abandoned seaside resort with roller coasters and
video arcades that's been converted to a refugee camp.
Everything is difficult in the "resort." Simply making a telephone call
involves long waits and convoluted instructions, gangs and duplicity lurk
around every corner, and the local fried fish turns out to be just batter.
With no money and nowhere to go to earn any, Tanya gets involved with the local
pornographer (Lindsey Honey -- a real-life king of British porn), and we feel
she's pretty much scraping bottom.
Luckily, Tanya is befriended by Alfie (the very entertaining Paddy Considine, A
Room for Romeo Brass), the local arcade manager, who takes the Russian duo
under his wing. What results is a tiny romance, held together with a story
about compassion and perseverance.
Written and directed by the Polish Pawel Pawlikowski, the film is somewhat
autobiographical and is extremely apt in its storytelling ability. While the
resort itself is relatively benign, Pawlikowski imbues it with a subtle horror
through creepy set designs that connote a carnival funhouse and washed-out
lighting that turns everything greenish. Korzun lets us truly feel her
struggle, emoting with a brilliance rarely seen in Hollywood.
Altogether, Last Resort is a small movie, with simple themes and a running time
slightly longer than your typical episode of ER. However, it carries far more
power than any old TV show -- and most other movies, to boot.
Russian roulette.
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Review by Christopher Null
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