“Freud’s Last Session” (** out of four) was a dour and drab historical melodrama set during World War II in which Sigmund Freud (Anthony Hopkins) and C.S. Lewis (Matthew Goode) meet and discuss the meaning of life, God, and philosophy, and how their differing worldviews and viewpoints are examples of existentialism. Strong acting by the two leads can’t elevate a talky and tedious script that is almost completely absent of any real dramatic fire. Might have worked better as a two-character play. Hopkins actually played C.S. Lewis in 1993’s “Shadowlands” which was a far richer and more compelling film.