Documentary Description
Gus Van Sant’s Last Days is a film about the death of Kurt Cobain.
While the name of the main character has been changed from Kurt to
Blake and the setting of the suicide changed from a greenhouse in
Seattle to a greenhouse in upstate New York, there’s no mistaking this
film is the product of Van Sant’s imagination pursuing the final,
lonely moments of the great ’90s icon. Rock biopic fans seeking a
traditionally gratifying plot should run as fast as they can from this
movie and see Rock Star or Sid and Nancy instead; Gus Van Sant’s
methodology is all about the slow, oppressive creep of time.
One shot lingers excruciatingly long on some random foliage outside
Blake’s (Michael Pitt, The Dreamers) mansion. In another, he makes
cereal. Then he sits on a bench for awhile. Or mumbles dialogue to a
Yellow Pages ad salesman played by a real-life Yellow Pages ad
salesman. Or gradually collapses while watching a Boyz 2 Men video.
Meanwhile, Blake’s parasitical hangers-on are slightly more animated,
occupying his chilly house and clearly on their way to becoming as
existentially destitute as he.
Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon appears, pretty much reprising an
interventionist role she must have played with the real-life Cobain,
but this rock star is far beyond rescuing from the brink. Later, when
Blake ventures into town to see a punk show, he is cornered by an
acquaintance played by Harmony Korine, who tells him a hilarious story
about playing Dungeons and Dragons with Jerry Garcia. Where the
accumulation of small moments like these don’t add up to much drama,
they create a pervading sense of dread and sad inevitability. In his
life, Cobain railed against all that was phony and hyped; by crafting a
visual poem resolutely defiant of rock star spectacle, Van Sant honors
the late singer as sincerely as he can, by keeping it real.
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this movie is a really good story about what some one else doesnt understaned cause they werent there and they didnt know the person so what i am sayin is that we need a movie done about kurt not his death ok