The federico castellon eroticismLast Thing He Wantedboasts big ideas that never quite gel and a complicated plot that can be challenging to navigate. But that's not what makes it such a frustrating watch.
The bigger issue is that every single scene feels like it's been taken out of context — only it turns out that seeing the entire context doesn't actually help. It's as if an entire season of television had been whittled down to under two hours, or as if someone had taken a book and ripped out chapters at random. It is, in short, completely incoherent.
Directed by Dee Rees from a book by Joan Didion, The Last Thing He Wantedcenters on a hard-nosed journalist, Elena (Anne Hathaway), who gets pulled into a dangerous game of international intrigue via an arms deal involving her father (Willem Dafoe). That's the simple version of the story. The long version... honestly I couldn't tell you.
In the end, the biggest question we're left with is how much richer this story might have been if it had had room to breathe.
The film starts out confusing, dropping us into 1982 El Salvador as Elena reports on the civil war. Elena reflects on the country's situation and her own in a voiceover that has presumably been lifted from Didion's novel. But the words don't translate well onscreen, and only serve to distract from our efforts to understand what the hell is going on.
From there, we jump to Elena in 1984. She's frustrated by her paper's decision to axe her coverage of Central America and aggravated by her ambivalent relationship with her father. There's also mention of a battle with breast cancer, the recent death of her mother, and a shaky co-parenting setup with her ex-husband. Other characters dip in and out as well, including a government spook played by Ben Affleck, and many of them drop names that you're supposed to note for when they become important later.
Like Elena herself, The Last Thing He Wantedis an ambitious overachiever. Rees is apparently interested in issues of journalistic integrity and government corruption and American imperialism, in the difficult dynamic between angry daughters and disappointing dads, and between well-meaning mothers and skeptical daughters, in Elena's own journey of soul-searching to figure out what really matters to her and why.
And she and her team work hard to bring them all together. Hathaway frowns at clues so hard she seems in danger of spraining a muscle, and Rosie Perez does her best to breathe urgency into a supporting role as Elena's colleague and confidant. (Affleck, on the other hand, looks like he's sleepwalking.) The script, by Rees and Marco Villalobos, tries earnestly to dole out plot twists at a brisk pace, and explain what needs explaining via exposition dump or flashback.
SEE ALSO: Anne Hathaway & Ben Affleck are here to stress you out with Netflix's 'The Last Thing He Wanted' trailerBut even the thrilling twists feel tedious in a story this difficult to follow. Dramatic music cues and horrified facial expressions signal shocking reveals, but good luck figuring out what exactly the reveals are and why they're supposed to be shocking. Hathaway and Affleck might be miscast, or perhaps it's just impossible to parse what they're trying to accomplish in character arcs this muddled.
In the end, the biggest question this film leaves us with is not who's profiting from American-made wars or why, as Elena keeps asking, but how much richer this story might have been if it had had room to breathe.
With its layered themes, intricate storylines, and intriguing supporting characters, The Last Thing He Wantedhas a lot of the makings of a great TV drama, delivered patiently over six or ten or eighteen episodes. Heck, even a three-hour movie might have allowed for more connective tissue tying the plot points together. At 115 minutes, though, it's a waste of 115 minutes.
Sir Ian McKellen sign was a Sir Patrick Stewart meme at Women's MarchElon Musk promised cheaper Tesla Insurance and it's here, sortaYouTube Kids is branching off with a separate websiteHollywood actors caught in China's public transport crush is hilariously painfulGarmin's Fenix 6 sports watches come with a scary array of featuresThe Morris Worm: The world’s first major internet attackTrump's piano guy and cello player just trolled Hillary fans, biglyThe Fairphone 3 is a green, laborLil Nas X casually unfurls scroll at the VMAs, instantly becomes memeHey Trump, check out these YUGE Women's March crowds across AmericaHow to check if police are watching your neighborhood with RingYouTube Kids is branching off with a separate websiteApple apologizes for dropping ball on Siri privacyFall movie preview 2019: What to watch with your familyWhy Londoners are standing in solidarity with the U.S. at the Women's March'Control' solves one of the key gaming mysteries of the past decadeElon Musk promised cheaper Tesla Insurance and it's here, sortaRihanna dabbing at Women's March in New York is as good as it soundsKFC's firstGolf balls programmed with Nissan’s self Lox Club's new pickle vibrator means there are now 2 pickle vibrators on the market Beauty Is Scary What is the 'One 'No One Will Save You's twisty ending, explained Hunter S. Thompson Rides with the Hells Angels Beautiful Image, or, Adolescence at the Spa In Which Hayden Carruth Complains About a Holiday Inn The only recipe you need for air Apple mental health features: How to log your mood Is This a Photo of the Brontë Sisters? Probably Not. Best headphones deal: Made for Amazon Kids Bluetooth headset on sale for $15.99 Don Marquis’s “The Old Soak” Think Like a Mountain—Aldo Leopold’s Path to Conservationism Teenage Dream: Four Paintings by Grace Weaver The CIA Published the Soviet Edition of “Doctor Zhivago” Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for September 28 What You Learn on Your Honeymoon Alphabet Finds Google at Its Most Machiavellian Still Lifes Capture the Evolution of the Watermelon The Font of Poetry, the Poetry of Font
3.5146s , 8288.140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【federico castellon eroticism】,Prosperous Times Information Network