***Out In The 2010s Be-Bop Night-Michael
Douglas’ Last Vegas
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Last Vegas, starring Michael
Douglas, Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman, Mary Steenburgen, and Kevin Kline, 2013
Some cinematic efforts are
aimed at a general audience, some toward teens and some, well some to the AARP
generation, the now AARP generation since the stars in this film under review, Last Vegas, won their acting spurs when we
were young and thought they were cool with their new way of interpreting acting.
Well they still are cool, Michael, Robert, Morgan, Mary, and Kevin, even if
they have lost a step or seven along the way. This is such an age-centered niche
film that I defy anybody to tell me that anybody under say forty would appreciate
the story-line.
Here is why. Michael Douglas
a 70 something life-long bachelor and ladies’ man decides in the face of
mortality to get married to a woman significantly younger than himself. Naturally
for the geriatric set this wedding was to take place in Las Vegas, the land of
ageless dreams. In order to do things up right for Michael it is decided that
he and his old time corner boys from Brooklyn (that’s in NYC for the clueless) should
meet up for one last go-round in Vegas.
After rounding up the old crew in Vegas all the
natural pratfalls of the old and set in their ways dodge the foursome (except
for a duel run at Mary by Michael and Robert). The major question though is the
propriety of Michael marrying that young thing which is of course resolved
against the notion of intergenerational alliances. The stop of the wedding is aided
by that age-appropriate Mary and her beguiling of Michael as well as sage advice
from Robert. Along the way all the issues of aging-sickness, assisted living, over-protective
children, sexual impotence, sexual desire, and mortality are dealt with either
comically or more seriously- issues that those who relate to the wisdom of 50 Cent would be either clueless or indifferent
about but that the generation of ’68 is dealing right now with as this is
written. Definitely a feel-good movie for oldsters.
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