The Last Castle (2001)
The Last Castle (2001)
The Last Castle (2001)
This is also another good movie of Mark Ruffalo, where he gives his audiences a good performance and does not disappoint his fans. The film is directed by an Israeli-American, Rod Lurie and produced by Robert Lawrence and Don Zepfel with a screenplay written by David Scarpa and Graham Yost. It was distributed by DreamWorks SKG and released on October 19, 2001 across North America with later releases on November 22, 2001 in Australia and January 4, 2002 in the United Kingdom. Its budget was of $72 million and earned gross revenue of $27,642,707, hence it was considered a box office flop. It has 53% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 114 reviews, but still manages 6.6 star rating on IMDb, because it has been well-acted by its cast with some brilliant special effect and cinematography. Clifton Collins, Jr. was also nominated for an ALMA Award for the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture category. The movie won the Taurus World Stunt Award for best fire stunt and was also nominated for best aerial work and best stunt coordination sequence.
It stars Robert Redford as Lietenant General Eugene Irwin and James Gandolfini as Colonel Winter, alongside Mark Ruffalo himself as Yates, Delroy Lindo, Steve Burton, Paul Calderon, and Clifton Collins, Jr. The film also has a cameo appearance, which goes uncredited, by Robin Wright Penn as Rosalie Irwin, the General's daughter. This drama is about daily clashes between inmates and the warden of the military prison, the United States Disciplinary Barracks, located on Fort Leavenworth, which is a United States Army post in Kansas. The movie shows the fight of will and ego between Eugene Irwin and Colonel Winter, when after being court martialed and sentenced for insubordination, he tries to lead his fellow prisoners against the warden to take charge and remove him from command, because he see the warden unfit for his ill treatment of the prisoners. One of the interesting trivia about this movie is that before it was released, DreamWorks changed the original poster from circulation as it showed the American flag flying upside down, which is a standard call for distress), to observe public sensitivity in the context of the events of the September 11 attacks.
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