Tedfoldol
everything you have heard about this movie is true.
Neive Bellamy
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Erica Derrick
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Stephanie
There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
lennybuttz
OMG what a sad depressing desperate movie. This reminds me of the gay stories written for teens by straight women who don't have a clue what really happens in a gay relationship. There's hardly any dialogue, the camera looks longingly at inanimate objects trying to create a sense of total disrepair and loneliness. There really aren't any fun times or happy times. I can't imagine anyone who would want to be in such a depressing relationship. It's a good thing it ended when it did your these 2 boys probably would have made a Romeo and Juliet suicide pack so they could always be together.Women will probably eat this crap up but gay men who have had real and meaningful relationships won't recognize these characters.The movie doesn't really fit the description, I didn't see anything about church and bicycles or baseball. These boys never did anything fun. Mostly they just laid around in a severe case of depression.
JackTy8655
This is an unusual and hypnotic short film about the relationship between two 18 year old boys in small-town Arkansas. There are few characters and very little dialogue, most of the explanations come from narration by the 2 boys, one of whom is about to leave for college. There is no angst about sexuality, or bullying from other kids. When a teacher asks how long they have been together, Luke simply replies "Forever. We've known each other since we were 4". These are two 'old souls' with a profound, calm and absolute love for each other.The film is primarily narrated by Luke, who describes himself as a slow learner. He is devoted to the brighter Jonah, and superficially sanguine about his inevitable departure for college. However, in one brief scene we see Luke alone in bed, faced away from the camera, apparently crying.In a rare piece of narration by Jonah he tells us how he idolises his boyfriend, "I think he's perfect, I would give up everything for him". He describes how some people feel comfortable in one place, while others feel trapped. Superficially this backs up Luke's belief that Jonah will move on to a better life, and outgrow him. But I wonder if the gifted Jonah isn't actually making an oblique reference to a person, and not a place. He tells us, "The grass is always greener, but not for everyone". Is he describing his relationship, and how he could never abandon Luke?The ending is ambiguous, leaving you to imagine your own conclusion. But I think Jonah has already told us what he will do.
FJT
The theme was interesting and somewhat different (e.g. no coming out, no hating families nor any drama related to coming out, nor any sudden death). Yet, it could have been so much more. Instead we get images, beautiful images, but no real grasp. If it were a short, of about 30 minutes, it would have been great. However, 1h and 13 minutes is nothing else than hipsters gone wild.The best scene was when Jonah, the alleged genius, makes his mom cry. Very real, and touching. The last 5 minutes showed peace of mind from the main actor, and a resolution. There was a clear end, and it was well done.
jm10701
Last Summer is about two teenage boys, Luke and Jonah, during the summer after their last year of high school in a small town in Arkansas. They have been best friends since they were toddlers and lovers for an unspecified amount of time - presumably since puberty made it possible. Their families and everybody they know knows about and supports their relationship.Jonah is a gifted student, artist and musician, while Luke isn't good at anything except sports, so they complement and help each other. They will be parting for the first time in their lives at the end of the summer, when Jonah goes north for college and Luke stays.This is a blissful, idyllic fantasy that feels completely true. If I didn't know that boys like these would NEVER receive such support in such a town (they even sit together in church), I would believe it was a true story, even a documentary. Although rationally I know it's impossible, it's so real and true emotionally that what ends up being impossible is NOT believing in it.Nothing much happens in this movie. There's some voice-over narration and some dialog, but it's primarily a sensual movie, a series of exquisitely beautiful visual and aural images that are impossible to describe adequately. Images of nature, of the boys in extreme closeup, many abstract images that are unidentifiable but powerfully evocative of the quiet, sensual, languid world in which the boys live. The score - when there is a score - is lyrical piano music by Beethoven and Schumann.Last Summer is like a poem - about love, about beauty, about peace, about perfect harmony with the natural world. It's extraordinary and indescribable.I never recommend that straight people watch gay movies, because if a gay movie is acceptable to straights it's by definition a failure. But this movie is so beautiful that I'm breaking that rule. Whoever you are, your life will be enriched if you see it.