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Harvey Shine (Hoffman) is a composer of ad jingles who is about to be fired, and Kate Walker (Thompson) is an airport survey-taker who has no talent with men. Harvey is in London to see his daughter get married, but he finds that her stepfather (James Brolin) is going to give her away. Kate has been on one too many blind dates with men who aren’t worthy of her.
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Kate and Harvey don’t hit it off well at first, but a chance second meeting in the airport bar sparks an attraction that leads to a nice afternoon together. Fates conspire to spoil their happiness, but come on! This is Emma Thompson and Dustin Hoffman! Who could resist either one of them?
Writer/director Joel Hopkins does a fine job creating enough tartness and confrontation to keep the film from being saccharine or maudlin. And while we’ve seen Hoffman do this guy before — he’s basically an older Ted Kramer (of vs. Kramer fame), Thompson gives an exquisite performance as an older woman who has given up on love and who uses wit and sarcasm to keep people at bay.
Like most good comfort food, Last Chance Harvey is immensely old-fashioned, but then again, that’s its biggest asset.
UPDATE: Last Chance Harvey is now available on DVD and Blu-ray
Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.
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