THE LAST DEATH

LA ÚLTIMA MUERTE

By David "leche" RUIZ

LEMON STUDIOS - as PROD

Thriller - Completed 2011

A young man is hurt, extremely ill, he has complete amnesia. Jaime, a psicoanalyst, finds him naked close to his cabin in the woods and decides to help him. He takes him to the hospital and they find out that the boy doesn’t exist according to the Worldwide Personal Database Bank.

    • Year of production
    • 2011
    • Genres
    • Thriller, Drama, Science-fiction
    • Countries
    • MEXICO
    • Languages
    • SPANISH
    • Duration
    • 107 mn
    • Director(s)
    • David "leche" RUIZ
    • Writer(s)
    • David RUIZ, Gaël GENEAU, Karen CHACEK
    • Producer(s)
    • Alexis FRIDMAN (Lemon Films), Billy ROVZAR (Lemon Films), Fernando ROVZAR (Lemon Films)
    • Synopsis
    • A young man is hurt, extremely ill, he has complete amnesia. Jaime, a psicoanalyst, finds him naked close to his cabin in the woods and decides to help him. He takes him to the hospital and they find out that the boy doesn’t exist according to the Worldwide Personal Database Bank. They escape the hospital avoiding Federal Officials and they realize they are way in over their heads. As Jaime continues to investigates, he finds out that the young man is registered in different hospital under different names, but now, it appears that the young man officialy doesn’t exist in this planet. He is Christian, the murder of three young girls, scentenced to three consecutive death rows, each one for one murder charge. One of the young girls’ father is Mateo Wiilkins, a very powerful businessman who has been avenging her daughters and his two nieces murders, killing Christian and bringing him back to life, cloning his organs and making him suffer thrice the traumatic executions, so that his last scentence is: THE LAST DEATH.
    • Partners & financing
    • Lemon Films
      COSTA FILMS, ALEPH MEDIA.
      FONDO DE INVERSIÓN Y ESTÍMULO AL CINE FIDECINE, MÉXICO,
      Película realizada con el Estímulo Fiscal
      del Artículo 226 de la LISR