Out now on dvd/blu-ray

Last Will, Movie

Last Will (Nobels testamente) 90

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The truth can be deadly

From the producer of the Millennium trilogy comes this Swedish crime drama about a female journalist who becomes a front-running witness to an extravagant murder. More

During her coverage of the annual Nobel Banquet, Annika Bengtzon (Malin Crépin) goes from crime reporter to key witness after seeing a double murder take place. A terrorist group tied to the Middle East admit to the killings. Whilst the press claim that a contentious Laureate in Medicine was the target, Annika's independent investigation soon leads her into dangerous territory. Hide

DVD / Blu-Ray

DVD

$32.99

19 votes / 3 comments The Talk

  • 89 %

    Want to See it

    What say you?

    • Tom

      Looks cool, with that Swedish detachment for good and evil that I like.

    • Kevin

      Good thriller, left open at the end for next 2 instalments...* * * *

    • BAM

      bit intense but looks riveting. mind you... so do most trailers

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Flicks.co.nz Review

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Dominic Corry Flicks Writer

Being firmly of the opinion that Europe has overtaken America as the finest provider of mainstream contemporary thrillers, I was very excited to see Last Will. More

The film proves an entertaining watch but stops a tad short of greatness. The various thriller tropes – an assassination at a public gala; crusading journalists battling with the cops; opportunistic witnesses on the run; an underlying conspiracy – are slickly presented but their main point of difference remains the Swedish setting.

As the journalist, frustratingly hamstrung by the fact she was a witness to the murder she so desperately wants to write about, Malin Crepin is a very sympathetic protagonist. She’s a woman with something to prove in a man’s game and her plight is very easy to root for. The grand implications of the murder she is investigating contrast nicely with issues in her domestic life and the film does an admirable job of suspending disbelief despite all the conspiratorial behaviour.

The film’s marketing pushes comparisons to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo but this is a much more digestible confection. Last Will may feel a little bit generic when you remove the Scandinavian origins but you could do a lot worse for an evening’s entertainment. Hide

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Press Reviews

TVNZ

Granted it is watchable, well made pacy fluff, despite being a challenge to logic... Full review.