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LA FINE DEL MONDO
PREVIEW in ENGLISH by LESLIE FELPERIN (www.variety.com) - Dal 26 SETTEMBRE
(The World's End; REGNO UNITO 2013; Commedia Sci-Fi; 109'; Produz.: Big Talk Productions/Working Title Films; Distribuz.: Universal Pictures International Italy)
See SYNOPSIS
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Titolo in italiano: La fine del mondo
Titolo in lingua originale:
The World's End
Anno di produzione:
2013
Anno di uscita:
2013
Regia: Edgar Wright
Sceneggiatura:
Edgar Wright e Simon Pegg
Cast: Rosamund Pike (Sam) Simon Pegg (Gary King) Martin Freeman (Oliver) Nick Frost (Andy Knight) Paddy Considine (Steven) David Bradley (Basil) Eddie Marsan (Peter) Julian Seage Thomas Law (il giovane Gary) Jasper Levine (il giovane Steven) John Duggan (cliente del pub) Zachary Bailess (il giovane Andy)
Musica: Steven Price
Costumi: Guy Speranza
Scenografia: Marcus Rowland
Fotografia: Bill Pope
Montaggio: Paul Machliss
Effetti Speciali: Chris Reynolds (supervisore)
Casting: Nina Gold
Scheda film aggiornata al:
09 Ottobre 2013
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Sinossi:
IN BREVE:
20 anni dopo aver tentato di portare a termine un epico pub crawl, cinque amici si riuniscono quando uno dei loro si mette in testa di cimentarsi veramente nella maratona di bevute. Ă Gary, un 40enne intrappolato nella sua adolescenza, a trascinare tutti gli altri nella loro cittĂ natale e cercare di raggiungere infine il mitologico pub chiamato The Worldâs End. Mentre cercano di conciliare passato e presente, si rendono conto che la vera sfida è quella per il futuro: non solo per loro ma per tutta lâumanitĂ . E raggiungere The Worldâs End diventa lâultima delle loro preoccupazioni.
SYNOPSIS:
Five friends who reunite in an attempt to top their epic pub crawl from 20 years earlier unwittingly become humankind's only hope for survival.
20 years after attempting an epic pub crawl, five childhood friends reunite when one of them becomes hell bent on trying the drinking marathon again. They are convinced to stage an encore by mate Gary King, a 40-year old man trapped at the cigarette end of his teens, who drags his reluctant pals to their home town and once again attempts to reach the fabled pub, The World's End. As they attempt to reconcile the past and present, they realize the real struggle is for the future, not just theirs but humankind's. Reaching The World's End is the least of their worries.
Commento critico (a cura di LESLIE FELPERIN, www.variety.com)
Five men pushing middle age go out drinking and get slaughtered, in some cases quite literally, in âThe Worldâs End,â the latest highly enjoyable exercise in jaunty pastiche from writer-director Edgar Wright and writer-thesp Simon Pegg, the brains behind âShaun of the Dead,â and âHot Fuzz.â Although a fraction less gut-bustingly goofy than its predecessors, this sci-fi-themed quest story about a deadly pub crawl has more emotional heft, partly thanks to impressive supporting turns from Paddy Considine and Eddie Marsan, dramatic heavy lifters who flex strong comic muscles here. Feverish fan anticipation should spell apocalyptic levels of B.O. success in Britain and beyond. Itâs due out Stateside Aug. 23 through Focus Features.
Feckless fortysomething man-child Gary King (Pegg) decides to reassemble âthe five musketeers,â a band of old friends who havenât really seen each other since they graduated from high school. Gary wants to have another try at completing the Golden |
Mile, during which the participants must drink a pint of beer at each of the 13 pubs in their home town of Newton Haven â an adventure they first attempted back in 1990 without getting beyond the sixth drinking den. By tradition, the last stop must be at the Worldâs End, a common pub moniker in Blighty that acquires extra significance here.
Unlike Gary, who was once the gangâs leader but now barely has the money to launder his Sisters of Mercy T-shirt, the other members of the group now seemingly act their age and hold down proper jobs. In the case of mild-mannered Peter (Marsan, so often the MVP in pics like âHappy-Go-Luckyâ and âVera Drakeâ), that means working at his dadâs car showroom to support his wife and kids. Money-minded Oliver (Martin Freeman) has become a real-estate agent glued to his Bluetooth, while recently divorced Steven (the ever-flawless |
Considine), perhaps the sharpest of the bunch but without Garyâs cockiness, works in construction. All agree to join in Garyâs scheme, only because he promises that Andrew (Wright and Peggâs usual wingman, Nick Frost), now a high-powered lawyer, has said heâll come, too. But it turns out that Andrew has the biggest beef with Gary and is now a teetotaler to boot.
Nevertheless, once the first act is finished, the men duly begin their trek down memory lane on a summerâs night, only to find that their old stomping ground is not quite the same as they remember it. Most of the pubs, as revealed in one of the picâs best jokes (and one that Brits will particularly appreciate), have lost much of their unique character. Even creepier is the fact that some local faces are exactly the same, and seem to have barely aged a day.
Itâs a bit of a |
shame that the trailer completely gives away the filmâs first big twist (if you care to preserve the surprise, read no further): that residents of Newton Haven have been replaced by mechanical replicants for reasons explained only later. No doubt the marketing departments involved felt it necessary to leak this spoiler in order to sufficiently convey the picâs horror-thriller aspects, but thankfully there are more twists and surprises in store, stacking reveal upon reveal to near-ludicrous levels that self-consciously evoke the Quatermass films from the 1950s. Other touchstones include the fiction of John Wyndham (âVillage of the Damned,â âThe Day of the Triffidsâ), plus big dollops of âInvasion of the Body Snatchersâ (both the 1956 and 1978 versions) and a bit of John Carpenterâs âThe Thing,â plus many other references, even to chopsocky classics.
Indeed, the script by Wright and Pegg sometimes feels somewhat crudely carpentered at times to include references |
exclusively for the delectation of genre-savvy auds. A bit more consideration might have been paid to nuts-and-bolts issues, such as why the hell do the principals keep going along with the pub crawl once itâs apparent that no good, not least for their livers, can ever come from seeing it through. Then again, that sort of devil-may-care attitude toward logic is consistent with the characters themselves.
Deep down, âThe Worldâs Endâ feels by, about and for the sort of wry, semi-smart, semi-stupid, semi-adolescent blokes (to use a Britishism that perfectly captures the vibe) seen here, which might have alienated more femme viewers if Rosamund Pike werenât on hand to provide such a spunky, likable rooting interest in her Sam, an object of affection for both Gary and Steven. Most importantly, the core five thesps interlock tightly as an ensemble; the horsepower of their collective comic timing makes some of the chatty, |
interstitial dialogue note-perfect, even if theyâre just shooting the shit.
Bill Popeâs handsome widescreen lensing on good, old-fashioned 35mm adds to the retro vibe, while kudos are also due to Paul Machliss for punchy editing work. Other tech credits are aces. |
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Bibliografia:
Nota: Si ringraziano Universal Pictures International Italy, Matilde Marinai e Paolo Centra (Xister)
Pressbook:
PRESSBOOK COMPLETO in ITALIANO de LA FINE DEL MONDO
Links:
Galleria Fotografica:
Galleria Video:
La fine del mondo - trailer
La fine del mondo - trailer (versione originale) - The World's End
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