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Last Looks
Last Looks
from Wikipedia
Last Looks
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTim Kirkby
Screenplay byHoward Michael Gould
Based onLast Looks
by Howard Michael Gould
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyLyle Vincent
Edited by
  • Joe Landauer
  • Nicholas Monsour
Music byPeter Nashel
Production
companies
  • Head Gear Films
  • Metrol Technology
  • Romulus Entertainment
Distributed byRLJE Films
Release date
  • February 4, 2022 (2022-02-04)
Running time
111 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Last Looks is a 2022 mystery film, directed by Tim Kirkby, from a screenplay by Howard Michael Gould based on his novel of the same name. It stars Charlie Hunnam, Mel Gibson, Morena Baccarin, Lucy Fry, Rupert Friend, Dominic Monaghan, Jacob Scipio and Clancy Brown.[1]

Plot

[edit]

After spending three years without human contact in a remote trailer, former Detective Charlie Waldo returns to Los Angeles to investigate the murder of actor Alistair Pinch‘s wife. Initially unwilling to take the case, he agrees to stay for one day after his ex-girlfriend Lorena went missing.

After Alistair is arrested as the prime suspect, Charlie is lured back to his trailer by gangster Don Q, who claims that Lorena secretly stashed a “mem“ in the trailer. He gives Charlie an ultimatum: to retrieve the mem within 24 hours. Charlie deduces that Alistair‘s wife was killed with one of his missing acting awards and that furniture at the crime scene was moved, casting doubts on the theory believed by the police. The police reveal to him that Lorena was seemingly killed over the mem and fixer Warren Gomes attempts to pressure him off the case.

Charlie storms a party hosted by billionaire Darius Jamshidi, Gomes‘s employer. The next day, Charlie confronts Don Q over Lorena‘s murder, but is knocked out by his henchman. He receives a message from Lorena, who faked her death and hid the “mem”, a memory stick, on his property. Charlie learns that both men ordering attacks him, Jamshidi and gangsta rapper Swag Doggg, have kids in the same class as Alistair. He finds out that all three men had affairs with nymphomaniac school teacher Jayne White and attack him to keep it secret, while Alistair even got her pregnant.

Charlie has now deduced the real killer: Wilson Sikorsky, Alistair‘s boss and his employer. He had an affair with Alistair‘s wife and killed her after she threatened to tell Alistair about the affair and force him to move back to England with her. He hired Charlie because he thought the disgraced detective wouldn’t uncover the mystery and make Alistair take the Fall. After Gomes blackmailed him, he killed him, too. Sikorsky flees but is killed by Q, who reveals that on the memory stick is an epic poem he wrote. Charlie and Lorena reunite.

Cast

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Production

[edit]

In October 2018, Charlie Hunnam, Mel Gibson and Eiza González joined the cast of the film, then titled Waldo, with Tim Kirkby directing from a screenplay by Howard Michael Gould. In June 2019, Jacob Scipio, Dominic Monaghan, Clancy Brown, Morena Baccarin, and Paul Ben-Victor joined the cast of the film.[2][3][4][5][6] In July 2019, Lucy Fry joined the cast of the film.[7] In August 2019, Rupert Friend and Method Man joined the cast of the film.[8][9] The film was retitled from Waldo to Last Looks in June 2020.[10] In December 2021, RLJE Films acquired North American rights to the film and set it for a February 2022 release.[11]

Principal photography began in Atlanta on June 18, 2019.[12]

Release

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Last Looks was released on February 4, 2022.[13]

Reception

[edit]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 68% of 38 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's consensus reads: "A mostly well-cast caper brightened by colorful characters, Last Looks may not be the most compelling mystery, but it's reasonably compelling in the moment."[14] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 49 out of 100, based on eight critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[15]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a 2021 American comedy mystery film directed by Tim Kirkby and adapted by Howard Michael Gould from his 2018 novel of the same name, the first in the Charlie Waldo series. The story follows Charlie Waldo (Charlie Hunnam), a disgraced former LAPD detective who has retreated to a minimalist life in the woods, limiting his possessions to exactly 100 items, only to be pulled back into investigation by private detective Lorena Nascimento (Morena Baccarin) to exonerate eccentric actor Alastair Pinch (Mel Gibson), arrested for the bludgeoning death of his wife. Featuring a supporting cast including Lucy Fry, Rupert Friend, and Clancy Brown, the film satirizes Hollywood excess through its neo-noir lens, blending humor with procedural elements amid a web of celebrity scandals and personal demons. Premiering at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival in January 2021 before a limited theatrical release on February 4, 2022, Last Looks garnered mixed critical reception, with a 70% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 37 reviews praising the performances and witty dialogue but noting a derivative plot and uneven pacing. Its box office performance was underwhelming, earning approximately $498,000 worldwide against a modest production budget. The casting of Gibson as an alcoholic thespian facing spousal murder charges sparked commentary for echoing aspects of his real-life struggles with substance abuse and legal troubles, though the film itself avoids direct allegory in favor of broad industry lampooning.

Development

Adaptation from Novel

The film Last Looks adapts Howard Michael Gould's debut novel of the same name, published on August 14, 2018, by Dutton, which draws on conventions through its portrayal of a withdrawn investigator navigating entertainment industry machinations. Gould, a with credits including The Double (2011) and (1993), structured the narrative around archetypal detective tropes updated for contemporary Hollywood settings. Development of the advanced to by November 2018, with scheduled for the first quarter of 2019, reflecting efficient progression from literary acquisition to scripting without prolonged delays common in genre adaptations. Gould penned the himself, a practice that historically correlates with higher retention of in neo-noir transfers to screen, as seen in cases like James Ellroy's involvement in L.A. Confidential (1997). This author-driven approach minimized deviations from the novel's core atmospheric and investigative framework during initial conceptualization. Tim Kirkby was attached as director, bringing expertise from directing episodes of the Emmy-winning series (2016–2019) and high-profile commercials, which informed his handling of the film's blend of wry humor and suspense in a feature-length format—his first such outing after television work. Kirkby's selection aligned with producers' emphasis on visual storytelling suited to the novel's intrigue-laden milieu, prioritizing directors versed in concise, character-focused pacing over those from purely cinematic backgrounds.

Screenwriting and Pre-Production

Howard Michael Gould adapted his 2018 novel Last Looks into the film's , maintaining the core investigative narrative centered on a disgraced detective's probe into a celebrity murder. By August 2018, Gould had completed rewrites to refine the script, aiming to align the story's causal chain of evidence and motives with cinematic demands while preserving the novel's emphasis on logical deduction over . These adjustments addressed potential pacing issues in translating prose-driven revelations to visual sequences, ensuring plot mechanics relied on verifiable leads rather than contrived twists. The project advanced to in November 2018, with initial development focusing on logistical planning for an independent production. Financing was secured through non-major studio entities, including Romulus Entertainment, Tango Films, Head Gear Films, and Metrol Technology, reflecting a model skeptical of traditional Hollywood financing dependencies and prioritizing creative control. In June 2020, the shifted from Waldo—the protagonist's name—to Last Looks, signaling possible script or branding refinements to better encapsulate the thriller's Hollywood . Pre-production logistics included early in , selected to ground the narrative's critique of excess in authentic urban , such as sprawling estates and gritty investigative sites that mirrored the story's causal interplay between glamour and . Storyboarding efforts emphasized visual flow for the screenplay's investigative , diagramming key sequences to link discovery with character motivations in a realistic, non-teleological manner. This phase avoided over-reliance on stylized effects, opting for practical setups that reinforced empirical plot progression.

Production

Casting Decisions

Charlie Hunnam was announced as the lead Charlie Waldo, a disgraced ex-LAPD detective living off-grid, in October 2018. Mel Gibson joined the cast the same month for the role of Alastair Pinch, an eccentric, alcoholic TV actor suspected in his wife's murder. Hunnam's casting drew on his rugged, authoritative screen presence established in Sons of Anarchy (2008–2014), where he portrayed outlaw biker , aligning with Waldo's archetype as a principled yet disillusioned former cop. Observers noted the role suited Hunnam's discomfort with conventional stardom, mirroring Waldo's voluntary simplicity limiting possessions to 100 items. Gibson's selection for Pinch capitalized on his real-life trajectory as a once-A-list actor turned industry pariah after scandals, including a DUI revealing antisemitic tirades and subsequent personal struggles with , providing unscripted authenticity to the character's boorish, self-destructive eccentricity. Gibson, sober since addressing his addictions publicly around 2016, delivered the portrayal without personal , as reflected in production-era interviews emphasizing his recovery. Supporting roles filled out the ensemble, with cast as Lorena Nascimento, Waldo's ex-girlfriend and recruiter; as Wilson Sikorsky, Pinch's agent; and as Jayne White, Pinch's stepdaughter, all integrated prior to commencing in 2020. These choices emphasized interpersonal dynamics in the investigation, with Baccarin and Friend's prior genre experience contributing to on-screen chemistry amid the film's Hollywood .

Filming and Technical Aspects

Principal photography for Last Looks commenced in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 18, 2019, spanning approximately six weeks, with one additional day of filming in , . Atlanta served as the primary stand-in for and Hollywood settings, utilizing practical urban and suburban locations to capture the film's depiction of the entertainment industry's underbelly without relying extensively on constructed sets. Cinematographer Lyle Vincent employed hard lighting techniques to simulate the intense sunlight, compensating for the Atlanta shoot's environmental differences and contributing to the film's noir aesthetic through stark contrasts and dynamic staging. Vincent's composition emphasized precise framing and crisp visuals, enhancing tension in investigative sequences while maintaining a grounded realism aligned with the story's causal progression. Production adhered to standard industry protocols during the 2019 shoot, predating widespread disruptions, allowing for a focused phase without documented delays from health mandates or crew reductions specific to this . The technical execution prioritized efficient work and minimal digital augmentation during filming, preserving scene integrity through on-site practicality over post-shoot corrections.

Narrative

Plot Summary

Charlie Waldo, a former LAPD disgraced by a past case, lives an ascetic, off-grid existence in the woods, adhering to a strict personal code limiting his possessions to 100 items and embracing self-sufficiency through activities like creek bathing and . His reclusive routine is interrupted when Lorena, a former associate, tracks him down and enlists his aid to exonerate celebrity actor Alastair Pinch, who has been arrested for the strangulation murder of his wife, Gina, in their home. Pinch maintains he suffered an alcoholic blackout during the time of the killing and relies on an alibi from his Russian chauffeur, but inconsistencies emerge as Waldo, reluctantly returning to civilization on his bicycle, begins probing the evidence and witnesses. The investigation reveals signs of evidence tampering, including manipulated crime scene details and financial entanglements linking Pinch to a Russian oligarch, prompting Waldo to navigate Hollywood's underbelly of eccentric producers, security firms, and celebrity enablers while adhering to his minimalist principles to sift deductions. As Waldo uncovers layers of deception involving staged alibis and cover-ups to shield high-profile figures, physical confrontations and betrayals escalate, testing his resolve and drawing him deeper into a web of tied to the industry's excesses. The probe culminates in the identification of the true perpetrator through rigorous scrutiny of causal discrepancies in the alibi chain and tampered proofs.

Character Analysis

Charlie Waldo embodies a deliberate rejection of institutional entanglements, adopting a minimalist lifestyle—limited to 432 possessions—as a pragmatic safeguard against the moral compromises inherent in his prior LAPD career. This philosophy, rooted in atonement for a botched high-profile case that led to his disgrace, enables him to pursue investigations untainted by bureaucratic or urban influences, as evidenced by his off-grid existence in the San Gabriel Mountains, which facilitates objective scrutiny of Hollywood's insulated scandals. His arc underscores causal realism in how personal integrity demands isolation from corrupt systems, mirroring documented LAPD scandals like the Rampart affair, where officer involvement in evidence tampering eroded public trust. Alastair Pinch, portrayed as a volatile, substance-abusing , satirizes the of elite impunity in , where personal excesses are shielded by and fame rather than accountability. His boorish demeanor and history of domestic volatility reflect empirical patterns of entitlement, akin to real-world cases of high-profile figures evading consequences through legal maneuvers and media spin, without mitigating the underlying behavioral pathologies that precipitate relational breakdowns. This characterization critiques how such figures perpetuate cycles of dysfunction, as Pinch's refusal to conform to societal norms causally exacerbates conflicts, drawing from industry observations of unchecked egos fostering environments ripe for exploitation. Lorena Nascimento's role as a driven highlights the perils of ambition within Hollywood's orbit, where professional zeal intersects with complicity in obfuscating elite misdeeds. Her recruitment of Waldo, motivated by loyalty to Pinch amid a probe, illustrates how careerist incentives can enable systemic cover-ups, grounded in her dialogue revealing entangled personal and professional stakes that prioritize access over transparency. This flaw causally contributes to prolonged deceptions, paralleling documented instances of private investigators in celebrity cases prioritizing client protection over evidentiary rigor, thus sustaining institutional pathologies. Ensemble figures like Pinch's associates further exemplify this, their opportunistic alignments critiquing how peripheral enablers sustain corruption through inaction or active facilitation.

Release

Distribution Strategy

RLJE Films acquired North American distribution rights to Last Looks in December 2021, opting for a limited theatrical rollout alongside on-demand and digital availability starting February 4, 2022, in select U.S. markets. This hybrid model aligned with strategies during the post-pandemic recovery, prioritizing accessibility over wide theatrical saturation amid lingering theater attendance challenges. Subsequent streaming on platforms including AMC+ expanded reach beyond initial theater screenings. Internationally, the film saw a digital release in the on June 10, 2022, followed by DVD on June 13, with availability in other select markets through varying windows. Netflix distribution in certain regions further broadened global access, though availability varied by territory. The release timing capitalized on Mel Gibson's return to high-profile acting roles following earlier career setbacks, positioning the film to draw interest from audiences attuned to his on-screen persona amid ongoing industry shifts toward streaming prioritization for mid-budget titles.

Marketing and Premiere

The primary promotional trailer for Last Looks was released on January 14, 2022, via and film aggregator sites, showcasing the film's blend of mystery, action-comedy elements, and satirical jabs at Hollywood's underbelly, while prominently featuring stars as the reclusive ex-cop and as the erratic actor suspect. This effort aimed at genre enthusiasts through digital channels, amassing views and shares on platforms frequented by fans of detective thrillers akin to those in Hunnam's or Gibson's action oeuvre. Accompanying key art included posters depicting the leads amid shadowy urban motifs symbolizing Los Angeles' moral decay, paired with the tagline "This city is a bad place to be a good guy," which reinforced the narrative's critique of excess and corruption in the entertainment industry without overt moralizing. The film launched without a dedicated festival premiere or red-carpet gala, opting instead for a day-and-date rollout in select U.S. theaters and on video-on-demand services starting February 4, 2022, following RLJE Films' acquisition of North American rights in late December 2021. Press activities centered on virtual interviews with cast members like Hunnam, Morena Baccarin, and Lucy Fry, who discussed the script's witty adaptation from Howard Michael Gould's novel and the ensemble dynamics under director Tim Kirkby, generating coverage in outlets focused on independent genre fare. Such efforts yielded modest pre-release buzz via trailer embeds and cast soundbites, though constrained by the limited-release model and absence of high-profile events.

Reception

Critical Evaluations

Critics delivered mixed assessments of Last Looks, with compiling a 70% approval rating from 37 reviews, reflecting appreciation for its eccentric character dynamics amid broader reservations about narrative structure. The film's aggregate score stood at 5.8 out of 10 based on over 13,000 user ratings, though professional critiques emphasized its quirks over commercial viability. Sheila O'Malley of awarded it three out of four stars on , 2022, commending the "twisted often-incoherent plot" for rendering every character idiosyncratic and secretive, thereby elevating quirks like Mel Gibson's portrayal of the erratic actor Alastair Pinch through raw charisma despite his inconsistent British accent. Select reviewers highlighted strengths in dialogue-driven satire of Hollywood excess, positioning Last Looks as a shaggy whodunit that probes elite pretensions via Pinch's boorish antics and the investigator's deadpan exchanges, often favoring verbal sparring over polished visuals. This approach drew favorable empirical parallels to Shane Black's Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005), where dense, banter-heavy plotting similarly prioritizes eccentric interplay in a Los Angeles underbelly, though Last Looks underdelivers on the visual flair and tighter causality that distinguish Black's work. In contrast, outlets like The Guardian critiqued Gibson's casting as an abusive celebrity—mirroring his real-life controversies—as undermining the film's comedic potential, a dismissal attributable to the publication's progressive leanings that amplify personal scandals over artistic merit. Such left-leaning evaluations often sideline the film's causal realism in favor of posturing, ignoring how Pinch's unrepentant exposes systemic double standards without excusing them, as evidenced by the plot's progression from domestic to broader industry complicity. Metacritic's 49/100 score from eight critics underscored persistent complaints of tonal whiplash and unresolved threads, yet overlooked how these elements intentionally mirror the genre's pulp roots rather than polished coherence. Overall, the reception privileges surface-level incoherence critiques over the film's success in deploying Gibson's intensity to humanize flawed antiheroes, a feat underappreciated in ideologically filtered analyses.

Audience and Commercial Outcomes

Last Looks earned a worldwide theatrical gross of $365,644, with domestic figures not reported separately on major tracking sites, indicative of its strategy emphasizing limited theatrical runs alongside primary distribution via video-on-demand and digital rentals starting February 4, 2022. This modest performance aligns with the film's independent production and niche genre appeal as a comedy-thriller, rather than a wide-release blockbuster, avoiding high costs but capping initial theatrical revenue. Audience reception metrics show a 72% approval rating on from over 250 user ratings, marginally exceeding the 70% Tomatometer score derived from 37 critic reviews, providing quantitative evidence of broad viewer alignment despite the film's stylized, self-aware elements often described in reviews as "cheesy" yet entertaining. This parity in scores counters potential divergences seen in other releases where public sentiment lags professional critiques, underscoring Last Looks' appeal to audiences seeking escapist, character-driven narratives over prestige drama. Post-theatrical, the film pivoted to streaming platforms including , , and , where sustained availability has supported niche longevity beyond metrics, as evidenced by ongoing listings and user engagement on these services without reported viewership rankings but consistent with VOD success patterns for similar mid-budget titles. Such distribution reflects commercial realism for genre films, prioritizing accessible digital consumption over saturated theatrical competition.

Analysis and Impact

Thematic Explorations

The film critiques Hollywood's moral decay through the character of Alastair Pinch, a celebrity whose erratic behavior and potential impunity highlight how fame enables unchecked excess and criminality. Pinch's portrayal as a television star shielded by his status during investigations into violent incidents illustrates a causal mechanism where elevated social position insulates individuals from consequences, fostering systemic ethical erosion within the industry. This motif draws from observed patterns in entertainment, where high-profile figures have historically evaded scrutiny due to influence networks, as evidenced by the exposure of predatory behaviors in the late 2010s that involved dozens of prominent executives and actors. In opposition to this decadence, Charlie Waldo's minimalist lifestyle serves as a principled rejection of dependency on power structures. Exiled to a remote trailer with strictly 100 possessions, Waldo adheres to a of restraint—"DON’T WANT. DON’T ACQUIRE"—prioritizing self-sufficiency over the material and social entanglements of . This approach underscores a causal to : individual circumvents the vulnerabilities of interconnected, hierarchical systems prone to abuse, enabling in a landscape defined by excess and compromise. Gender dynamics emerge amid these power imbalances, with female characters demonstrating proactive agency rather than subordination to male-dominated . Lorena, Waldo's ex-partner and a , initiates the central inquiry by enlisting his aid, navigating Hollywood's underbelly through calculated alliances. Likewise, figures like Jayne White engage directly in the intrigue, wielding influence over key developments and exposing vulnerabilities in ostensibly dominant male roles, such as through symbolic acts of intimacy and control. This avoids reductive victimhood, emphasizing women's instrumental roles in unraveling without reliance on external validation.

Controversies in Casting and Reception

The casting of in the role of Aldous Pinch, a hard-drinking Hollywood action star suspected of murdering his wife, sparked commentary for its apparent parallels to Gibson's real-life scandals, including his July 28, 2006, arrest for during which he directed antisemitic slurs at a , and leaked 2010 audio recordings alleging domestic abuse toward ex-partner . Variety's review highlighted the audacity of the decision, stating it required "some nerve" to feature a "scandal-embattled star" in such a meta-fictional capacity. critiqued the choice as "cast too close to the bone," arguing the comedy-crime thriller "would have been a lot more fun without him" given the character's accusations of . These observations reflected broader industry tensions over Gibson's post-scandal resurgence, with some outlets questioning Hollywood's selective forgiveness amid ongoing cultural scrutiny of artist accountability. No widespread public boycott or production disruptions emerged, but the casting fueled niche discussions on platforms reviewing the film, where defenders emphasized separating performance from personal history—Gibson portraying a perpetually intoxicated role despite maintaining sobriety since 2011. In reception, the 's mixed critical response—with a 33% score from 40 reviews—intersected with casting unease, as some evaluators praised Gibson's committed, scenery-chewing turn while others saw it as tonally jarring or ethically fraught. Audience metrics were similarly divided, with limited theatrical earnings of under $1 million against a reported $30 million budget, though streaming availability on AMC+ from February 2022 mitigated commercial fallout. Debates over the 's self-referential Hollywood satire amplified perceptions of insensitivity, yet lacked organized backlash comparable to higher-profile cancellations.

References

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