Thehibikiew
Not even bad in a good way
Intcatinfo
A Masterpiece!
Doomtomylo
a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.
Neive Bellamy
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Leofwine_draca
THE LAST DAY is a television movie re-staging of the story of the infamous Dalton gang who terrorised the Wild West back in 1892. The film is notable for having a strong cast featuring Richard Widmark as the ageing hero and a number of youthful actors making up the gang, including Tim Matheson and Tom Skerritt. It's a slow moving character piece for the most part but one which nevertheless gets the job done thanks to an authentic period atmosphere and dogged performances from the leads. Things build carefully to an exceptional extended shoot-out at the climax, perfectly staged on the TV movie budget.
Spikeopath
The Last Day is directed by Vincent McEveety and collectively written by Jim Byrnes, Steve Fisher and A.C. Lyles (Lyles also produces). It stars Richard Widmark, Barbara Rush, Robert Conrad, Richard Jaeckel, Tim Matheson, Christopher Connelly, Tom Skerritt Tom Skerritt and Loretta Swit. Music is by Jerrold Immel and cinematography by Robert B. Hauser. Harry Morgan narrates.Film is about the events leading up to, and including, the Dalton Gang's attempted robbery of two banks simultaneously in Coffeyville, Kansas, October 5th 1892. After some nifty opening credits that shift between whimsy and dramatic stills, pic settles into beefy characterisations, focusing on the three days before the robbery. Here we get to know the Dalton Gang members, their plotting, their peccadilloes, their goals, their loves and their egos (Bob Dalton wants to better Jesse James)."Get yourself killed for a town that doesn't want you"?Back in Coffeyville, retired gunfighter Will Spence (Widmark) is the key player. He has settled down with his wife Betty (Rush), but Bob Dalton (Conrad) wants Spence out the picture. As soon as the town gets wind that the Dalton's are nearby, they get in a tizzy and start to remind Spence of his past, thinking he's the cause of imminent danger. Again, we get to know the principal players here in town, with a grand old barn dust-up as a side-bar to raise the pulse.Everything is gearing up towards the day of reckoning, the day that is famous in Western history. The actual events were recorded as 13 minutes, and give or take a minute, this filmic version is close to real time, and it's corking! The suspense of the robberies is coiled spring like, and then the carnage begins, shoot-outs galore, high grade stunts, every minute is well worth waiting for.It asks you to be patient for its first hour, then it picks up a pace, then it delivers the goods with gunpowder on top. Yes there's messages here, and of course genre formula, but this is historically informative, exciting, and performed with skill by an impressive cast. File it under one of the better TV Westerns and see it if you can. 7/10
bkoganbing
As has come down to us in western lore the infamous Dalton brothers and associated outlaws came to a violent end in Coffeyville, Kansas when they tried to rob two banks there at the same time. The Last Day is a film by A.C. Lyles and is a fictionalized account of both the Daltons and their plan for this last big score and the citizens of Coffeyville and their response. The Daltons were from Coffeyville and they were violating that well known maxim about defecation where you consume.The brothers are played by Bob Conrad, Richard Jaeckel, and Tim Matheson and their two running buddies on that day are Tom Skerritt and Christophr Connelly. All of them are tried and true professional criminals, Skerritt with a drinking problem. Only Matheson as Emmett Dalton, the youngest is fairly new at the trade.The forces of law and order are represented by former gunman Richard Widmark who has settled in Coffeyville with wife Barbara Rush and son Sparky Marcus. He has good reason to think the Daltons are planning a robbery here, but with his past against him can't quite convince the town.The message here is the same as in classic films like El Dorado, let the professionals handle it. But the marshal is Gene Evans who is old and worn and Widmark is the only one who has experience in these situations albeit from the other end. His past as a gunfighter works against him, especially with one of the bank presidents Logan Ramsey. Ramsey usually plays hateful people and you will hate him even with him ostensibly a good guy.Giving us a stand by your man message is Loretta Swit playing Conrad's girl friend. In her own way Swit is the standout performer in The Last Day.Fifteen years earlier The Last Day would have gotten theatrical release. It's a crisp and exciting western especially when the shooting starts.
zardoz-13
A predictable but polished television horse opera from veteran Paramount producer A.C. Lyles, veteran TV director Vincent McEveety's "The Last Day" is about as good as a made-for-TV western can get. They have spared no expense with a first-class cast and top-notch production values. Robert Conrad is appropriately scruffy looking as lead bank robber Bob Dalton who is thinking about Argentine after his hold-up. He concocts a plan to rob two banks at the same time in Coffeyville and his brothers and friends go along with him on this daring but dangerous outing. Meantime, renowned gunfighter Will Spence has been living quietly in Coffeyville, Kansas, with word floating around about his reputation with a gunslinger. Spence owns a stable, and he keeps his gun belt coiled around his holstered six-gun in a hamper. As the action unfolds, two of Bob's henchmen ride in and try to gun him down, but Spence kills them with nothing but a pitch fork and a lot of luck. Eventually, word gets around that Bob Dalton has been seen around town. When the Daltons ride in a 9:30, everything goes smoothly for Bob and his younger brother Emmett (Tim Matheson) at their bank, while Bob's other brother Grat (Richard Jaeckel of "The Dirty Dozen"), Dick Broadwell (Christopher Connelly of "1990: The Bronx Warriors"), and Bill Powers (Tom Skerritt of "Alien") encounter trouble across the street., The bank manager assures Grat that their bank vault is on a time clock and he cannot open it for another fifteen minutes. What Grat doesn't know is that the bank manager has told him a lie. The town barber (Shrug Fisher) warns Marshal Connelly (Gene Evans) that the Daltons are in town, and Connelly notifies Spence. Spense tells them to assemble, but not to open fire until the Daltons and their minions leave both banks. A trigger-happy towns-person ignores Spence's orders and starts blasting away, and the rest of the armed town's folk follow his lead and open fire. A brief gunfight erupts. Bob is shot off his horse and Emmett shot in the back trying to get Bob off the street. Writers Jim Brynes, Steve Fisher, and A.C. Lyles give the cast interesting dialogue to utter. Not bad for its kind.