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With its unpaved streets and rickety buildings, Jericho, Texas is an unlikely outpost for gun-toting mobs from Chicago. But with Prohibition in full swing, tweed-suited rum-runners have corrupted and terrorized this sleepy border town. Civil law is dead. Like their bosses in the Windy City, the leaders of Jericho's rival crime families are warring for control of a lucrative bounty of booze: truckloads of 100-proof, making their way from Mexico to a thirsty nation's illicit network of gin joints and speakeasies. Fatefully, a mysterious loner, Smith, passes through looking for a place to spend the night, but quickly decides to cash in on the action. He cleverly hires himself out to each gang while remaining loyal to no one but himself. A soldier-of-fortune with his own agenda, he betrays both sides to the other in a bold attempt to destroy the bootleggers and rescue what remains of Jericho's shell-shocked residents. But a traitor cannot live among mercenaries without being exposed and killed. (texto oficial do distribuidor)

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Kaka 

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inglês While watching this bizarre piece, I could not help but compare it to the films of Quentin Tarantino. Walter Hill serves a simple story of a rough gunslinger bursting with one-liners with such exaggeration that it is hard to believe at times. On the one hand, there are bloody shootouts, on the other, dry humor and lots of fun. Christopher Walken is also brilliant in the role of the legendary shooter Hickey. A fairly unknown film that was relative success for Hill and solidified Bruce Willis’s position as a tough guy. ()

lamps 

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inglês The W&W duo, that is Bruce Willis and Christopher Walken, against each other in one movie. I couldn't miss it, and in the end I was quite satisfied. Willis performs to his standard and watching his skilled work in taking down his mafia adversaries is a treat as always. And Walken once again proved that when Hollywood needs a truly cool bad guy, he’s simply the best and surest choice, even if he was given too little space for my taste. Last Man Standing is a very unconventional gangster flick in its conception, but it deserves more attention if only because this kind of tributes to Leone, Coppola and other legends are unfortunately no longer made these days, and it is unlikely that we will ever see them again. Bruce has us used to much better stuff, but comparing this rather intimate crime drama to The Last Boy Scout or Die Hard would be as silly as expecting Uwe Boll to ever make a good film... 75% ()

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EvilPhoEniX 

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inglês Now this is awesome! The perfect 90s gangster flick. Bruce Willis is very good in these roles as a tough, wisecracking hero, and the same goes for Christopher Walken, who here plays a brutal gangster with a scary history. An abandoned town, two gangs, and Willis standing between them. A proper action flick with plenty of blood, dust, great lines and great pacing. 90% awesome. ()

Malarkey 

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inglês Bruce Willis couldn’t quite pull it off for me in Last Man Standing. His trademark tough-guy face was on full display, lingering like the stench of old socks, and it got old fast. There’s just something missing to make this enjoyable, especially since it has that western vibe I’ve never really been into. What also bugged me is that Willis doesn’t deliver the same quippy one-liners like he did in The Last Boy Scout. His tough-guy act works for a while, but staring at it for nearly two hours was a bit much. These days, I prefer when he pokes fun at himself in action comedies rather than going full serious like this. It just doesn’t stack up to his bigger hits. ()

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