Michael, at 30, has a great job, still has his four best friends, and has a beautiful girlfriend, but his life seems predictable. Until he meets a college girl.Michael, at 30, has a great job, still has his four best friends, and has a beautiful girlfriend, but his life seems predictable. Until he meets a college girl.Michael, at 30, has a great job, still has his four best friends, and has a beautiful girlfriend, but his life seems predictable. Until he meets a college girl.
- Awards
- 1 win & 4 nominations
David Haydn-Jones
- Mark
- (as David Haydyn-Jones)
Lisa Hochstein
- Stripper #1
- (as Lisa Mackay)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaZach Braff has said that he worked on the script and that he "tweaked the dialog a little bit". He also claims to have written the ending "porch" sequence.
- GoofsThey find out the sex of the baby. Shortly after, she announces she is 3 months. Normally, you cannot find out the sex of the baby until 20 weeks, 5 months.
- Alternate versionsThe US DVD/Blu-Ray has five deleted scenes and two alternate endings.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Last Kiss: Deleted Scenes (2006)
- SoundtracksWarning Sign
Written by Chris Martin, Guy Berryman, Will Champion, and Jon Buckland (as Jonathan Buckland)
Performed by Coldplay
Courtesy of Capitol Records
Under license from EMI Film & Television Music
Featured review
I saw this at the Toronto International Film Festival to a packed house!
And what a showing it was!
When I stepped in to watch this, I had no idea where the movie would go, nor if it would be remotely interesting. But it quickly started to make sense. An outdoor wedding by the lake, guys talking guy stuff, and cute girls chatting and flirting from the other table, and soon you know it's going to be about guy/girl relationships. And so the plot evolves.
And while it's not an entirely unique story-line, there are unique things about it. The characters are distinct. The main cast of 4 guys all get enough screen time and have their own 'problems' that can easily interweave that the story could really jump from one character to the next. That's a good thing. A relatively predictable story then becomes slightly less so.
If you're looking for a moderate movie -- nothing too serious, but then nothing too fluffy -- something that you can watch, maybe chuckle a few times, or maybe something that might get you to think more deeply about relationship (and in particular if you're considering getting into a long-term relationship, or if you're not sure a long-term relationship you're in), then this would be just the ticket. You get into the minds of the characters, and there are quite a few that you can get to know, which lets you empathize with them. Some questions that I pondered watching this: is avoidance an option in life? Is truth always the best policy?
Anyways, women will find this to be an enjoyable watch, as there are a few distinct women's points of view that come forth through this which seemed quite honest.
Anyways. Strong acting. A few giddy moments, but fun overall. The result was a story that moved along nicely.
And what a showing it was!
When I stepped in to watch this, I had no idea where the movie would go, nor if it would be remotely interesting. But it quickly started to make sense. An outdoor wedding by the lake, guys talking guy stuff, and cute girls chatting and flirting from the other table, and soon you know it's going to be about guy/girl relationships. And so the plot evolves.
And while it's not an entirely unique story-line, there are unique things about it. The characters are distinct. The main cast of 4 guys all get enough screen time and have their own 'problems' that can easily interweave that the story could really jump from one character to the next. That's a good thing. A relatively predictable story then becomes slightly less so.
If you're looking for a moderate movie -- nothing too serious, but then nothing too fluffy -- something that you can watch, maybe chuckle a few times, or maybe something that might get you to think more deeply about relationship (and in particular if you're considering getting into a long-term relationship, or if you're not sure a long-term relationship you're in), then this would be just the ticket. You get into the minds of the characters, and there are quite a few that you can get to know, which lets you empathize with them. Some questions that I pondered watching this: is avoidance an option in life? Is truth always the best policy?
Anyways, women will find this to be an enjoyable watch, as there are a few distinct women's points of view that come forth through this which seemed quite honest.
Anyways. Strong acting. A few giddy moments, but fun overall. The result was a story that moved along nicely.
- How long is The Last Kiss?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $20,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,614,790
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,627,989
- Sep 17, 2006
- Gross worldwide
- $15,852,401
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content