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Twenty years after their first epic pub crawl attempt, the "five musketeers" reunite to complete the ultimate challenge - one night, five friends, twelve bars - a boozy quest on which only the strongest will survive. They soon realise that reaching their final pub, The World's End, may be the least of their troubles. They're having the time of their lives, ready to take on the world but tonight they may have to save it. (Universal Pictures UK)

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Reviews (11)

Malarkey 

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English Simon Pegg, Nick Frost and Edgar Wright meet for the third time in a row. And for the third time in a row, do a decent job. It’s no longer so much fun as Shaun of the Dead but it’s still good. It’s not as much about fun rather than about the boys getting together and shooting another crazy but good movie, this time poking fun at sci-fi. Moreover, I saw The World’s End after about six beers, so my rating reflects that. Nevertheless, I think that had I not returned from a pub, I’d have opened a beer while watching this, because a movie like this needs that. As pubs are its subject matter, it’s hard not to think about beer during the first five minutes. Anyhow, the boys managed to get a great cast for their movie – Freeman, Marsan and Considine were really cool. Each of them did their own thing and it fit the movie well. I wouldn’t mind going on a beer trip like this, maybe except for the global consequences. I’d give those a pass. But the rest was a wild ride indeed. ()

lamps 

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English Once again, they didn’t disappoint. Not only do they overwhelm the viewer with 110 minutes of explosive, uncompromising and unspecified humour, but they also very successfully continue their trend of bold parody of everything they could think of when writing the script. They've already taken on zombie horror and action-crime movies, only to kick the ass of all the "revolutionary" science-fiction creators whose stories have often had little to do with originality for a good few years now. The first half works very well as pure comedy, mainly thanks to Pegg's notoriously peculiar Gary, who, through emptied pints, attacks the position of the best character ever created by Simon, while the second, marked by an alien conspiracy, blue-blooded robots and the constant presence of tremendous insight and great gags, is already the perfect genre ride that perhaps everyone has been eagerly awaiting from the Wright-Pegg-Frost trio. Making fun of everything and giving absurd dimensions to absurd things doesn't always pay off and of course it has its flaws, but when all that is wrapped in a beer marathon and played by five extremely likeable drunks they just couldn't go wrong :D And they didn't.. 80% ()

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Marigold 

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English The first third is like a flowery hop, boyish-bodied ALE with a delicious taste, whereas the second third begins to smell like an ordinary Eurolager, but it's brisk and drinkable. The final third is like a musty small cellar beer with the dull aftertaste of steamy socks of people who saw too much in their idea. A film whose wheels fall off. Wasting talent and good ingredients for something that again does not lose sight of the genre, but desperately loses sight of itself. History repeats itself, but compared to Hot Fuzz, this is an even thinner attempt at a cheeky meta-party. Most of all, it's quite sad to see how all the overlap literally stamps out the film at the end of the verbatim and still stays with only a few badly grafted references. This is simply not cheeky or clever, just weathered. I pour the end out the window. [65%]. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English It’s good, but my expectations were higher. Hot Fuzz set the bar very high, blending with more grace the serious plot of a thriller with parody. The World's End tries to blend this style of humour with a horror sci-fi thriller, but it grinds a bit (though not as much as, in my opinion, Shaun of the Dead), sometimes the humour is too much, sometimes not enough. What I’m most sorry about is the weird and unnecessary end-credits scene, it ruins the positive impression of the bold and surprising twist with which the film had won me over. ()

gudaulin 

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English Guy Ritchie often returns to the world of British crime, yet he is always different, at least to the extent that he remains interesting and entertaining. Wright comes up with new ideas, only to soon reveal that he is still filming the same way, using the same kind of adolescent humor that loses its appeal and becomes more annoying. Wright has exhausted himself over the years and The World's End is a clear example of that. Yet all he had to do was stick to the original idea of ​​trying to revive the old gang for at least a few hours and return to the times of adolescence. He also needed to tone down Simon Pegg, who, while being a stalwart of the British comedy scene, needs a strong directorial hand over him because otherwise, he becomes an uncontrollable element. Under these conditions, Wright could have expected an above-average result, but I wouldn't ask too much of him. It only gets worse and worse from the fight in the pub restrooms. Overall impression: 40%. ()

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