The World’s End

Posted on August 25, 2013 at 2:14 pm

B+
Lowest Recommended Age: Mature High Schooler
MPAA Rating: Rated R for pervasive language including sexual references
Profanity: Constant very strong and crude language
Alcohol/ Drugs: The theme of the film is a pub crawl intended to make the characters very drunk, drinking and drunkenness, drugs, drug dealer
Violence/ Scariness: Comic peril and violence with some graphic images
Diversity Issues: Homophobic insult
Date Released to Theaters: August 23, 2013
Date Released to DVD: November 18, 2013
Amazon.com ASIN: B00BPEJX12

world's endSimon Pegg, Nick Frost, and co-writer/director Edgar Wright have re-united for the third in the genre-bending “Cornetto” series, which I refuse to call a “trilogy” because I want them to keep going.  In case you’re listening, guys: Please.

“Shaun of the Dead” was a romantic comedy with zombies and strawberry Cornetto ice cream.  “Hot Fuzz” was a sort of deranged meta-buddy cop film with blue Cornetto ice cream.  And now we have “The World’s End,” a comedy about a group of high school friends who get together to re-create a legendary pub crawl in their suburban home town.  Twenty years after their high school graduation, they go back home to have a pint in each of the twelve pubs that constitute the “golden mile,” concluding at one called The World’s End.  And yes, that is foreshadowing.

Things go badly.  Things are not as they remembered.  When the group arrive at the first pub on the list, it is depressingly generic.  In the decades since they left, everything has been homogenized into sterile, interchangeably dull corporate decor.  The second one is indistinguishable  from the first.  Gary has always cherished the notion that they were legends in the town.  But no one seems to remember them, not even the high school bully.

Then the robot aliens show up and things get worse.

Co-write Pegg plays Gary King, who is now only dimly realizing that the qualities that lead to popularity in high school do not equip one for success thereafter.  This is particularly the case when those qualities are essentially limited to creating the kind of experiences that result in watching the sun come up with bloody knuckles, a hangover, and vomit on your shoes.  You can still do that after high school, as Gary’s current status as an inpatient in a substance abuse clinic attest.  It’s just that it no longer makes him a hero to his friends.  Now all respectable men with jobs and, for most of them, families, they have moved on and have no interest in going back.

But Gary, who thinks he lost his way when they failed to make it to all twelve pubs in “the golden mile,” manages to persuade the other four to come with him and try it again.  For no other reason except for pity, survivor guilt, and perhaps some wish to revisit a carefree past, they decide to come along.  It is possible, though, that they envy Gary’s freedom as they are constantly checking with their watches, their phones, and their wives.  There’s car dealer Peter Page  (Eddie Marsan — all of the characters have royal court-related names),  realtor with a permanently embedded bluetooth earpiece Oliver Chamberlain (Martin Freeman of “The Hobbit”), recently divorced Steven Prince (Paddy Considine), and Gary’s former best friend Andy Knightly (Nick Frost), whose hostility indicates that a revelation about some horrible misdeed lies ahead.  Also in town is Sam Chamberlain (Rosamund Pike), Oliver’s sister, who was there for an important part of the legendary pub crawl in 1990.

Gary is darker than the previous roles Pegg wrote for himself, which mostly had him as an amiable, if immature and socially inept doofus (although in “Hot Fuzz” he was a very buff and straight arrow variation).  He clearly relishes playing a completely dissolute character who cannot seem to figure out why a system of doing or saying whatever will get him what he wants at that moment without any regard to the consequences for himself or others is not working for him anymore.  It is also good to see Frost playing something different as well.  His Andy is responsible, dignified, and quietly competent and confident.  He also turns out to be very good at fighting the robot aliens.

It’s a delicious mix of understated British humor and over-the-top craziness, with witty lines, some knowing digs at Hollywood, and razor-sharp satire.  It also has the only credible explanation for hideous public sculpture I’ve ever seen.  I hope they end up with at least as many in the series as there are flavors of Cornetto ice cream treats.

Parents should know that this film has constant bad language, including crude sexual references and a homophobic insult, a lot of drinking and drunkenness, drugs, and mostly comic peril and violence with some disturbing images.

Family discussion:  Why did Gary’s friends agree to come back?  Why was the pub crawl important to Gary?

If you like this, try: “Shaun of the Dead,” “Hot Fuzz,” “Paul,” and the television series “Spaced”

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Interview: “The World’s End” Composer Steven Price

Posted on August 21, 2013 at 5:12 pm

The fifth and best end of the world movie of the summer is called “The World’s End,” and it is the last in what is now being called the Cornetto Trilogy from Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, and co-writer and director Edgar Wright.  “Shaun of the Dead” was a zom-rom-com (zombie romantic comedy) that featured red Cornetto ice cream.  “Hot Fuzz,” a send-up of over-the-top action films, featured blue.  Stay through the credits of this one to find out what flavor, or, I guess I should say, flavour since it is British, appears in this one.world's end poster

I spoke to Steven Price, who composed the score.

You were writing for the wonderful Pegg/Frost/Wright trio and the movie has robot aliens!  Was this the most fun movie project ever?

It’s certainly up there!  It was an amazing gift for someone who does music to play with because you’ve got the big action sequences and the sci-fi mystery stuff and relationship scenes.  So it’s everything you might want to do as a composer and the team involved were pretty good as well.

How did you get involved?

I met Edgar quite a while ago now.  The first film I worked on was “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.”  It is wonderful to work with him because everything is so well-planned so choreographed, but he is very, very open to different ways of doing things, so as a collaborator he is great fun. Edgar exec produced “Attack the Block,” which was my first feature film, so when this one came up, and he explained what he had in mind, it was an exciting time, really.  The characters were all friends and getting out of school.  Now they’ve all moved on with their lives, with wives and kids, except for Gary King, who was one of the most popular ones in school and never got over that night.  Everything seems to have gone wrong for him so he persuades them to do this pub crawl but none of them really want to.  You can’t go back, really.  That’s the main theme.

This is a comedy action sci-fi film.  How do you set the mood for that musically?

One of the first things that Edgar and I talked about was that everything musically we would do would be serious because for the characters none of it is a joke for them.  Whenever we did err on the side of doing anything at all funny you realize very soon that it doesn’t help at all.  We took it incredibly seriously and the action music was meant to drive along what was happening.  The performances in the fight sequences are so amazing and convincing and the actors genuinely did it themselves.  It’s not like there are a lot of cutaway for stunt people. It’s all very choreographed and well put together that it was great of fun to do.  It’s not like when you have to cover up a lot of cuts.  You could play along with the action and progress the whole tension of the scene as it went.  It was fun to do those fight scenes and get the energy right up there.  There was so much on scene you find yourself just playing along and enjoying it, really.

At what stage did you get involved?

Edgar’s great because he involves you early on.  I saw the script a while before they shot and we talked about what he was doing.  There’s a lot of great pop tracks in the film, really evocative songs from the years when these characters were growing up that Simon and Edgar put into the script.  We talked a lot about that and Edgar wanted to make sure that it was not like, here’s a song and here’s the score but the whole thing weaved around it so that the music should feel connected to that.  That was something we were very keen to do, incorporate some of those sounds into the score itself so you feel like the whole thing’s a body of work, this rhythm going through and connected to the characters.  Simon plays a character named Gary King.  Quite often you’ll hear a kind of slide guitar thing for his character.  The connotation is the Western and getting the gang back together and all of that kind of thing.  That came out of me listening to “Loaded” , which is a huge song in the film.  In my mind, he lives that era, and the slide guitar became a kind of character thing for Gary.  So all along I was playing it, and I always intended to replace it with some great player because my slide guitar playing is a little bit shaky.  But toward the end I realized it was was absolutely the thing to do to leave it as it was.  This version is in Gary’s mind.  There are a lot of things wrong in Gary’s life and it’s not a bad thing to have the guitar a little shaky.

And what about the female lead, played by Rosamund Pike?

We’ve all looked back on things in our youth, so that was a great one to do.  We played it very pure.  We didn’t steer away from being emotive.  We didn’t try to make it arch or a bit knowing.  Steven, played by Paddy Considine, always genuinely wondered how it would have worked out.  So we played it very purely.  That is, until it is interrupted by aliens!

The characters were in high school in the 90’s? Was that your era?

Yes, we hark back to the early 90’s, like ’91.

I’m a little younger than them but music-wise that was when I was first old enough to have my own money to buy records and some of the tracks we used were real blasts for me like Suede’s “So Young.” Scary that it was 20 years ago!  It evokes that whole  time so well and it was nice to reflect that in the score.  There’s music of the era like the Stone Roses.  I remember vividly getting Stone Roses records, comparing the vinyl and it was almost like a currency at the time, which records you had.  The Blur track — I remember being obsessed with that in the day and trying to learn the guitar part.

It’s not a traditional Hollywood film score.  It’s embedded in the British sounds from what we would watch in science fiction programs and the  Radiophonic Workshop stuff.  They we a BBC unit who did the 80’s-era “Dr. Who” — a lot of those early synth sounds came in very useful.  They evoked a peculiarly British thing.  We also have an orchestra.  The film does get very big.  But it’s combined with a lot of the electronic stuff and interesting noises and experiments, things that felt very rooted in this small town where it takes place.

 

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