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The World’s End is the third installment in The Three Flavors of Cornetto trilogy (also known as the Blood and Cornetto Trilogy–personally I think of them as the Blood, Cornetto, and Simon-Pegg-Falling-Over-Fences Trilogy). I won’t say final; Douglas Adams has proven that when it comes to oddball, speculative, brilliant British entertainment, trilogy does not mean three.

Here’s hoping, at any rate.

The trilogy refers to the Simon Pegg/Edgar Wright collaboration of movies: Shaun of the Dead

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Hot Fuzz

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and now The World’s End.

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Each has blood (you’ve got red on…) and different flavored cornettos appear at least once in each movie (strawberry, original and mint, respectively). For those of you who don’t know what a cornetto is, to the google with you.

Pegg co-wrote the movie with Wright, and co-stared in it with Nick Frost (along with the full merry band of Blood-and-Cornetto-ites, who appear, in varying degrees, in every movie).

Besides blood, cornettos, cast mates and Pegg falling over fences, the film shares the same sense of gleeful joy and deprecating self-awareness that made Shaun of the Dead an instant hit and elevated parts of Hot Fuzz to sheer comedic genius.

It lacks, perhaps, the homage that Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz had, in parts satirical and in parts sincere, to the great movies that had gone before them in their genre; it’s social commentary doesn’t have the light, piercing touch that Shaun of the Dead did, nor does it use parody paired with comic, over-the-top violence to explore bonding, community and friendshi– and the depths to which we would go to defend those things–as well as Hot Fuzz. 

The World’s End tries too hard sometimes, is a little too on-the-nose at others—it gets a little loud and a little in your face and a little dark; and at the end the biggest emotion is a dazed sense of “WTF, boys, WTF?”

So, just like a night of hard drinking, when you think about it.

The five mates and the King, pub #6.
The five mates and the King, pub #6.

The movie starts slow, with a voice over and flashback sequence that not only proves unnecessary—the information is immediately given again in dialogue between the now-adult, estranged friends—but also deflates the power and impact of most of the reveals later in the movie.

However, once we get past the over-exposed-so-you-know-it’s-a-flashback beginning, the movie picks up.

Pegg plays Gary King, a somewhere-near-forty-year-old who has decided that his only chance at feeling anything is to complete the twelve-pub crawl in his hometown that he and his five high school friends were unable to finish twenty years prior.

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Through lies, manipulation and a cocky inability to hear the word no, he reunites them with the plan of drinking one pint (or more) at each of the 12 pubs in LechtWorth, New Haven.

The next hour or so is a rollicking good time, with excellent dialogue—the comedic talent onscreen is enormous, and the witty give and take between the core five friends is hugely enjoyable and quite often hilarious.

The story of a lonely, lost man trying to recapture his youth any way he can is handled well—if sometimes relying a little too much on a known trope or two—and the rescue-the-town-from-the-evil-not-quite-robots-and-don’t-forget-to-save-the-girl is a fun, fast-paced adventure, liberally sprinkled with some exceptional fight choreography (there is a bit with Pegg and a pint that is particularly good). Nick Frost, especially, shows not only a moving amount of emotional depth but also an unexpected ability to kick major ass.

And, it must be mentioned, kudos to Simon Pegg, his costumer, and his hair/make-up people, for making him actually sexy as bad-boy Gary King.

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By the time we get to the eighth pub (or was it the seventh…) the movie has more than made up for slow start; if a few things seemed too easily explained away, if one or two decisions seemed unclear, the pace was so fast, the acting so good, the dialogue so clever, that we were willing to forgive the odd slip here and there.

And then we got to the World’s End, the last pub.

And there the movie stumbled quite a bit.

The dialogue went from crisp and droll to histrionic and sermonizing (though there was an excellent cameo by Bill Nighy); the plot suddenly took a left turn (no spoilers, I promise) and then, just as you settled down in the new direction, it took a sharp right.

And then it added a voice over.

It was not ever a bad movie; at times it was a brilliant movie. It did have more weak points then the other two installments; it was also took much braver, larger choices. The World’s End was almost perfect; the story it wanted to tell was large and grand and even a little bit beautiful; but in the end it didn’t quite know what to do it with it.

So then there were explosions. ‘Cause explosions are cool.

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All in all, it’s a recommend, but maybe at the matinee ticket price.

3.5/5

Over the course of the past nine years, writer/actor Simon Pegg and writer/director Edgar Wright have worked together to mold a fresh comedic voice in the industry. With previous overwhelming successes such as Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz, Pegg and Wright return with their third collaborative effort, The World’s End. And once again, critics and moviegoers alike are raving about the final product.

Former legend in his own mind, Gary King (played by Simon Pegg), makes a desperate attempt to reunite with an old group of friends in order to successfully complete a drinking marathon that they failed to accomplish 20 years prior. But as Gary and his odd-ball buddies embark on the evening’s festivities, the drunken fools quickly discover that they may be the planet’s only hope of surviving an alien presence.

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Edgar Wright’s The World’s End is exactly what you’d expect it to be. Fans of his and longtime writing companion Simon Pegg’s earlier work will be more than content with their latest film. The jokes are constant and the outlandishness is off the charts. While I openly admit that I’m not a huge fan Wright and Pegg’s previous efforts (I find them to be a little more mediocre than the general masses), I can recognize when I’m a minority. Don’t get me wrong, I am a fan of both men separately. Run, Fatboy, Run can always brighten my day and Scott Pilgrim vs. the World has a rugged and unique style that lures me in effortlessly. Therefore, as I watched The World’s End, I was upset to find consistent well-written and exceptionally timed jokes fall victim to an overly long and absurdly boring plot. I understand, however, that most other viewers will appreciate the quaint humor and charming characters enough to disregard the ludicrous story that’s used to hold the film together.

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One of the most impressive facets of the feature is Wright’s wonderful cast of actors and actresses. As we all know, Simon Pegg and co-star Nick Frost have the capability to elevate just about any movie they’re in. But it’s Ray Donovan‘s Eddie Marsan along with Paddy Considine and Martin Freeman who all shine in their own right and allow The World’s End to exceed all of Wright and Pegg’s other previous collaborations. In addition to its main stars, the film has one other area that really stands out and surprises the audience. I was shocked by the amount of highly-choreographed fight scenes that were all executed flawlessly. The action is believable and immensely detailed, something I really wasn’t expecting to see. However, although the jokes are clever, the performances are strong and the action is a pleasant surprise, The World’s End manages to numb the audience with a far-fetched sci-fi twist that clearly makes a mockery of itself by the time the credits roll.

Despite my lack of unfettered love for Edgar Wright’s The World’s End, it’s definitely a film worth seeing if you enjoy his other work. Personally, I demand more in terms of story and effective subplots. Take a chance if you must, but consider yourself warned. Mediocrity reigns supreme.

GRADE: 2.5/5

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Briefly: Edgar Wright’s The World’s End is now less than a week away from (North American) theatres, and we couldn’t be more excited!

The Cornetto trilogy is almost over, but how about a refresher on the previous chapter? A new, interactive screenplay for Edgar Wright’s Hot Fuzz has been released online, and is a great look into one of this decade’s most recognized films.

The screenplay is filled with plenty of images, videos, and notes that I’ve never seen before, and should serve as a great flip-through for fans of Wright’s films, or anyone excited for The World’s End!

Head here to take a look at the screenplay (which isn’t embeddable like the Shaun of the Dead one was), and let us know if you’re excited for The World’s End!

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Well it looks like fans of Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg have a little something to look forward to today. Deadline is reporting that The World’s End will start filming in September for a spring 2013 release. Wright will direct the script that he co-wrote with Pegg, who will once again star alongside Nick Frost. This will be the third film collaboration between them, following Shawn of The Dead and Hot Fuzz. Here’s the log line for the flick:

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.

If this flick is anything like the last two movies they worked on together then I think we will all have something to look forward to come next spring, but what does this mean for Wright’s long-in-devlopment take on Marvel’s Ant-Man? It was just last week that Wright posted a cryptic tweet, along with a picture (seen below), on his twitter page that read, “Received this in the mail. What can it mean?” The tweet, as well as recent comments from  Marvel Studios’ Kevin Feige led many, myself include, to believe that Ant-Man would be Wright’s next movie. Well, it would seem as though that is not the case and that the movie is still in-development. On the bright side, fans will get a new Edgar Wright/Simon Pegg movie, which is always a good thing.

"Received this in the mail. What can it mean?" - Edgar Wright