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The Last Castle

The Last Castle

  • Status: Released
  • 19-10-2001
  • Runtime: 131 min
  • Score: 7.169
  • Vote count: 1345

A court-martialed general rallies together 1200 inmates to rise against the system that put him away.

Robert Redford

Lt. Gen. Eugene Irwin

James Gandolfini

Col. Winter

Mark Ruffalo

Yates

Delroy Lindo

Gen. Wheeler

Clifton Collins Jr.

Cp. Ramov Aguilar

Kristen Shaw

Clerk (Staff Sgt.)

Paul Calderon

Dellwo

Brian Goodman

Beaupre

Steve Burton

Cap. Peretz

Sam Ball

Duffy

Jeremy Childs

Cutbush

George W. Scott

Thumper

Steve Sandfort

Inmate

Michael Irby

Enriquez

Frank Military

Doc

Nick Kokich

Pvt. Niebolt

David Alford

Corp. Zamorro

Dean Hall

Harris

Peg Allen

Secretary (Kelly)

Rick Vito

Red Team Leader

Maurice Bullard

Sgt. McLaren

Forrest D. Bradford

Simmons

Scott Michael

Gunton

Dean Miller

Carvelli

Michael Q. Davis

Honor Guard

Joe Keenan

Trustee / Lester

David Chattam

Wheeler's Aide

Dan Cole

Trustee #2

Hans Mooy

Sgt. Moore

James-Justone-Thomas

Rapper

Jamie Roberto Mantecon

Inmate

Jeffery G. Fagan

Inmate

Lyon Fleming

Inmate

Darius Willis

Inmate

Rico Moody

Inmate

Rocky Abou-Sakher

Inmate

Sean Cameron

Guard

Mary Jean Bentley

Visitor

Robin Wright

Rosalie Irwin (uncredited)

Michael Dinwiddie

Guard / Red Team / Color Guard (uncredited)

Karen Espenant

Reporter in the Press Crowd (uncredited)

Michelle Way

Color Guard / Prison guard (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Robert Redford is "Irwin", a disgraced general sent to a military prison after his court-martial for disobeying orders during an operation in Africa that led to the death of eight under his command. Almost immediately he and the commandant "Winter" (James Gandolfini) take against each other and what now ensues is a gradual positioning of both men for a contretemps. The former man, initially, just wants to do his time - but as he sees the arbitrary and sometimes lethal fashion in which the place is run, he is soon working with the 1200 other inmates to create an effective unit than can resist, perhaps even overthrow, the regime. The first half hour of this is quite well developed, battle lines are drawn as the two men play a game of intellectual chess. Sadly, though, that momentum descends quite quickly into a rather far-fetched drama that featuresd a plot riddled with holes, some totally implausible incidents and in the end, a denouement that has something of the pantomime to it. Redford adopts a less is more approach to his role which he carries off adequately with little dialogue - indeed, pretty much little of anything. Gandolfini is, however, completely unconvincing as a senior officer who appears to have little humanity or grasp on the reality of the scenarios presented to us by Rod Lurie. Clifton Collins Jr offers the best effort from amongst the cast with his portrayal of the troubled "Aguilar", but I couldn't quite make out just what the role of the duplicitous "Yates" (Mark Ruffalo) was meant to represent - maybe I had just given up by then. I reckon this might have made for a decent read; allowing us to inject character traits into what personalities are on offer here using our own imagination. As a piece of cinema, however, it is little more than a vehicle for a star who is nowhere near his best working with a story that stretched my imagination just a bit too far for far too long.