Last Breath is a fantastic survival story, akin to “The Abyss” and “Into the Deep,” highlighting the perils of saturation divers, including nitrogen narcosis and equipment failure, leaving viewers breathless. I was holding my breath right along with them.
It’s a pretty short film so they didn’t waste a moment of time. The story was tight and perfectly paced to keep you on the edge of your seat.
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Woody Harrelson brought the star power but even the supporting cast kept up with his talent.
Overall, this was a solid movie. Enjoy.
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Grade: B+
About The Peetimes: This is a short movie that’s based on a true story. I found a spot that will keep you up to speed and not risk missing more in depth scenes.
There are no extra scenes during, or after, the end credits of Last Breath.
| Rated: | (PG-13) Brief Strong Language |
| Genres: | Drama |
| USA release date: | 2025-02-28 |
| Movie length: | |
| Starring: | Woody Harrelson, Cliff Curtis, Simu Liu |
| Director: | Alex Parkinson |
| Writer(s): | Mitchell LaFortune, Alex Parkinson, David Brooks |
| Language: | English |
| Country: | United Kingdom |
Plot
A true story that follows seasoned deep-sea divers as they battle the raging elements to rescue their crew mate trapped hundreds of feet below the ocean’s surface.
RunPee.com owes RunPee Sis a huge debt of gratitude. She sees any movie needed with no complaints and has done so for ten years (even basing Thanksgiving and Christmas family festivities around the seeing films). In 2015 Sis ran the entire RunPee enterprise herself, while RunPee Dan, Jilly and Mom went traipsing off to Europe. Sis is the spider in the web holding the RunPee family together — besides being a funny, well rounded person, and a joyous pleasure to be around. Her favorite films start and end with horror (which thank goodness she’s happy to see, since most of us don’t have the stomach for it) — but also likes silly comedies, sad dramas, and musicals of all types. If you’ve used a Peetime for a scary film, you probably have RunPee Sis to thank for it.
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I couldn’t wait to see this movie because this is the career path my grandson aspires too by enlisting in the Navy after high school. Honestly, this scared me. Left in tears and gratitude for exceptional training of those career divers. The Scottish accent was a bit tough to understand, but the acting and realistic scenes were well done.
Wow, that makes the movie a lot more real doesn’t it. Are you glad you watched it, or do you think you’d be better off not knowing? If it helps, as dangerous as the job is, they do take extreme safety percautions. The last time I looked a “roofer” was the most dangerous job in the US. We humans are poor judges of risk. If a loved one is a police officer there’s probably always this feeling of dread about what could happen. But if they’re a capenter, working on houses, it’s like, “how dangerous could that be?” But the carpenter has a much higher chance of serious injury than a police officer.
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