Movie Review – The World’s End

Edgar Wright’s conclusion to his “Cornetto Trilogy”, The World’s End feels like wearing a film version of a nice, well-worn, comfy pair of soft, warm slippers. Much like Hot Fuzz before it, this film takes its time setting up the pins, before letting fly with a massive strike of action and gonzo comedy in the finale – the cast seem to be having a blast, and the “getting the band back together” flavoring Wright sprinkles throughout touches a nerve in this reviewer; in many ways, it proves the old saying, that you can never go home. The World’s End is an absolute corker.

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– Summary –

Director :  Edgar Wright
Year Of Release :   2013
Principal Cast :  Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, Martin Freeman, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike, David Bradley, Pierce Brosnan, Thomas Law, Bill Nighy (Voice)
Approx Running Time :   109 Minutes
Synopsis: Five old school chums get back together after twenty years, to try and complete their childhood mission to drink a pint at twelve pubs in a single evening.
What we think :  Edgar Wright’s conclusion to his “Cornetto Trilogy”, The World’s End feels like wearing a film version of a nice, well-worn, comfy pair of soft, warm slippers. Much like Hot Fuzz before it, this film takes its time setting up the pins, before letting fly with a massive strike of action and gonzo comedy in the finale – the cast seem to be having a blast, and the “getting the band back together” flavoring Wright sprinkles throughout touches a nerve in this reviewer; in many ways, it proves the old saying, that you can never go home. The World’s End is an absolute corker.

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The Ultimate Pub Crawl. With aliens.

After the release of Edgar Wright’s Hot Fuzz, the zany action/comedy featuring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, fans expected another team up of this cinematic wunderkind trio sooner rather than later. Expectations were left wanting, however, when Wright went off to make the comic-book-film Scott Pilgrim, while Pegg and Frost teamed up with director Greg Mottola for the alien-comedy, Paul. It would be six long years before Wright and his leading lads would team up again, this time for The World’s End, the concluding chapter in what has become loosely known as the Three Flavors Cornetto Trilogy; Shaun Of The Dead and Hot Fuzz being the previous installments. The World’s End was set to be some kind of genre-slapping comedy masterpiece, if you asked fans of Wright and Co; would it revolutionize an entire genre like Shaun Of The Dead, or would it go from 0 to 100 in five minutes like Hot Fuzz? Or would it….  not? Considering it’s a slightly different beast than either of those other films, that’s a tough question to answer, but the cliff-notes version is that The World’s End should satisfy fans of Wright, and will entertain even the casual viewers who stumble upon this expecting some kind of apocalyptic Armageddon-clone.

Corey was fine until he learned there was no wi-fi in the town...
Corey was fine until he learned there was no wi-fi in the town…

Synopsis courtesy Wikipedia: Gary King (Simon Pegg), a middle-aged alcoholic, resolves to track down his estranged friends and complete the “Golden Mile”, a pub crawl encompassing 12 pubs in their hometown of Newton Haven. The group attempted the crawl as teenagers over 20 years earlier, but failed to reach the final pub, The World’s End. Gary persuades Peter Page (Eddie Marsan), Oliver “O-Man” Chamberlain (Martin Freeman), Steven Prince (Paddy Considine), and Andy Knightley (Nick Frost) to join him in Newton Haven. After arriving in Newton Haven, the group are briefly joined for a drink by Oliver’s sister Sam (Rosamund Pike), over whose affections Gary and Steven were one-time rivals. In the toilets of the fourth pub, Gary gets into a fight with a surprisingly strong and agile teenager. Gary accidentally knocks the teen’s head off, exposing him as a robot. Gary’s friends join him and fight more robots, after which Andy abandons his teetotal ways and drinks an order of shots. The group decide to continue the pub crawl to avoid suspicion; as they do, however, it becomes increasingly obvious that Newton Haven in currently in the midst of an alien invasion, and our boys must do their level best not to be killed or captured, and to drink their way to the end of the Golden Mile.

How we wish Adam Sandler's career would finish.
How we wish Adam Sandler’s career would finish.

Where to begin? You’d have to go a long way to find anybody who hasn’t at least seen one of Edgar Wright’s previous two Cornetto films, Shaun of The Dead and Hot Fuzz. Whether you enjoyed them or not, there’s no denying a certain skill and rapacious wit goes into each one of his movies, and I’m pleased to say The World’s End is yet another example of the man’s brilliance. The team of Wright and Simon Pegg deliver a script that’s obviously set up for Pegg’s unique humor and status as a rising star (general audiences will know him as Scotty from the JJ Abrams Star Trek franchise), and you can sense the film’s “family” ethic from script to screen. There’s a lot of friends here, working behind the camera and in front, and The World’s End gives us not only some terrific comedy beats, but (like Hot Fuzz before it) some gangbuster action moments – not to mention several genuinely moving moments of dramatic gravitas that overreach anything Pegg and his buddies have done before – it just feels so effortless on their behalf, you want them to continue to do so forever.

Ernie, you know we look like the kids from The Goonies, right?
Ernie, you know we look like the kids from The Goonies, right?

What always makes me laugh about an Edgar Wright film is that they generally start going in one direction, until a complete left-field plot twist takes the film into uncharted territory faster than you can say “aliens are invading”. Hot Fuzz’s balls-out finale, a massive shoot-out through a small British town, was a terrific example – until then, the film had the flavorings of some kind of sly (slightly gory)  mystery, before exploding into action with a frantic final twenty minutes. The World’s End doesn’t spend quite as long setting things up before it all goes bananas, but let’s just say this film puts Hot Fuzz’s over-the-top finale in the shade. Gary and his friends only get four pubs into their crawl, before they uncover the presence of robots (aliens, actually, but who’s counting), and the film’s zany antics ratchet up even further than before. The thing driving the action, however, is not the fact that the town appears to be taken over by robots, but rather the characters we’ve come to know and love. Gary, Pete, Ollie and Steve are all solid, well-written characters with faults and foibles that make them utterly relatable – Nick Frost’s Andy, who is given a “mysterious past” with Gary, provides much of the more crucial moments of angst and drama, although once he downs those shots in pub 4, all bets are off.

Don't look over there, that's where the trouble is.
Don’t look over there, that’s where the trouble is.

The World’s End makes the most of its small-town, big-concept premise. Wright is canny enough to know that he can trigger fear in people by the simplest of methods: make something familiar creepy, and it’ll creep people out even more than normal. Setting an alien invasion in a small town like Newton Haven, where the illusion of normalcy provides security for the main characters, brings us into this falsehood until Wright’s ready to unleash his special-effects-driven trick-bag. And when it is unleashed, you’re sitting there thinking how awesome it all is. It’s the “it could happen anywhere” thing that freaks people out, and The World’s End certainly delivers that.

Manchester's nightlife wasn't what Gary expected.
Manchester’s nightlife wasn’t what Gary expected.

It also delivers its fair share of laughs. Simon Pegg absolutely steals this from all comers as Gary King, the loudmouth, garish, obnoxious and self-centered drunkard who never made it past the age of about sixteen. His performance ranges from moderately outlandish into complete drunken mess by the end credits, as he bullies his friends into doing what he wants, and drinking his way through the movie. There’s something about King, though, that screams at us for sympathy – we do sympathize with King’s inability to move on from his school days, while his friends have all gone on to get jobs and have families. That sense of being left behind, of not living up to the dream, is something we can all understand. Pegg’s backed up by a wonderful cast, all of who approach this material gamely. Paddy Considine is solid (and quite funny) as Steve, Eddie Marsan makes the role of the unfortunate Peter Page one to remember, Martin Freeman’s stiff-upper-lip Oliver is serviceable, while Nick Frost goes hard to steal the spotlight from Pegg (he doesn’t succeed) as Andy, the teetotaler who fell out with Gary years prior, and who seems to hold a grudge. Rosamund Pike provides some welcome female fun throughout as Sam, and her tete-a-tete’s with Pegg and Considine make for hilarious viewing.

Say what you like about Roger, but he wears nice clothes.
Say what you like about Roger, but he wears nice clothes.

Folks are likely to be asking where The World’s End ranks in the Edgar Wright filmography, as far as quality goes. I still say Hot Fuzz beats it for sheer hutzpah, but it’s definitely on par with Shaun Of The Dead (time will tell, I guess) and only slightly less fun than Scott Pilgrim’s cartoonish antics. Honestly, though, we’re only talking about miniscule factors of enjoyment here; none of Wright’s films to-date have been dogs, and The World’s End isn’t going to be the one to break the chain. It’s furiously edited, funny and energetic; the manic energy from Pegg and the gangbuster final two thirds (it’s weird, but the alien bombshell happens quite early in the film, making the latter hour or so a full-bore action extravaganza!) provide The World’s End with a delightfully adult momentum that traverses this film from open to close. The World’s End comes highly recommended.

8-Star

 

 

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14 thoughts on “Movie Review – The World’s End

  1. Agree with others here, this was not quite up to scratch. I didn't relate to it in the same way as Hot Fuzz – perhaps because I live in a little rural village in SW England and not in a suburb of a large city. What makes Hot Fuzz work is that the village is so very believable, and so when the guns come out it turns the whole plot on its head. I just don't think of pubs as places for pub crawls or drug dealing, and once the pubs didn't quite ring true then the twist, still a surprise, didn't quite work as well as the villagers-coming-out-with-guns-blazing of Hot Fuzz. Instead of replacing a scene I know well and love with something completely the opposite, it replaced one doesn't-quite-ring-true scene with another even-more-not-ringing-true scene.

    1. I kinda think I know what you mean, Tom, and thanks for stopping by!! Fair point in that the setting didn't quite ring true for you in World's End – having visited England briefly once, I was less discerning with regards to this element, but thinking about it now, I doubt there would be too many drug deals going down in the front bar of the local these days. Pub crawls, though, are a different story – at least here in Australia!

  2. I really loved this film, but I agree that I would put "Shaun of the Dead" as my favorite of Edgar Wright's work. "The World's End" was a fitting conclusion to this "trilogy," even though I have a feeling there will be more to come from this team. I also felt that this was the most emotional of the three, which I liked quite a bit.
    My recent post The Trailer Park: “The Babadook” (2014)

    1. What made you pick Shaun of The Dead over Hot Fuzz (or Scott Pilgrim, for that matter?)….. inquiring minds want to know – personally, I think Hot Fuzz ranks higher, so I'm curious to know your reasons!

      1. My bad, Rodney. I meant to put "Hot Fuzz" as my favorite of his four films (I'm tired). I love both the action and the horror genre, but I think it was Simon Pegg and Nick Frost watching "Bad Boys" that tingled me in all the right places.
        My recent post The Trailer Park: “The Babadook” (2014)

        1. LOL, gotcha! I agree, I think that finale to Hot Fuzz just beats any major action film for sheer balls any day of the week. Personally, I think Nick imitating Point Break's "shoot the sky" moment was the best bit!

  3. I'm glad you can put this one in the same area as Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead. So many people didn't like this film because they wanted the exact same thing as the other two. It's different, yes, but that's a part of it. I think it's slightly more mature and dramatic and quite the fitting end to one of film's greatest unofficial official trilogies. And yes, Pegg knocks it out of the park.

    1. For making such a thorough twat seem rather affectionaly lovable (in a Homer Simpson kind of way) I think he deserves a medal. If his performance hadn't worked, the film would have fallen apart. Just a shame Nick Frost's character wasn't as memorable.

    1. Interesting you say that Ruth, because my wife felt much the same way, while a lot of my guy friends found it hilarious! Perhaps the overly "blokey" nature of the plot didn't appeal to you as much, maybe? I guess you could argue that a lot of the humor of Shaun Of The Dead and Hot Fuzz weren't there as much, but as an "end of the world" satire I thought it hit a home run.

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