Dir: Evan
Goldberg and Seth Rogen
Starring: Seth
Rogen, Jay Baruchel, James Franco, and Jonah Hill
Society is
saturated with celebrity. Look no further than the amount of “followers” on
social media pages and ratings for reality programming for evidence.
Writer/director combo, Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen, take this fascination to
the extreme with This Is The End, placing a slew of recognizable
personalities amidst the apocalypse. Based on a short film entitled Jay and
Seth vs. The Apocalypse, Goldberg and Rogen inject their film with
self-deprecating hilarity and humorous horror set-ups.
The film begins
with actor Jay Baruchel coming to Los Angeles to visit his longtime pal Seth
Rogen. After some “herbal” recreational assisting re-acquaintance, Rogen
suggests an evening house party at James Franco’s Hollywood Hills mansion.
Baruchel is tentative, annoyed by the Hollywood scene and lifestyle, but
begrudgingly goes. Franco’s party is littered with recognizable faces, most
poking fun of each other’s professional work or playing their characters to
extremes in the instance of Michael Cera’s scene stealing gags. Baruchel leaves
the party frustrated and is followed by a pleading Rogen to return. A booming
blast sounds and beams of blue light grab unsuspecting people, pulling them
towards the sky. Chaos ensues, consuming numerous people in a swallowing pit.
Rogen and Baruchel retreat to the confines of Franco’s home fortress, awaiting
rescue along with Jonah Hill, Danny McBride, and Craig Robinson.
The film relies
heavily on the consequent personalities all these characters have established
for themselves in prior films. Baruchel as the awkward nerd, Rogen as the
unaware slacker, and Danny McBride as the abusive egocentric are noticeable
personas throughout. This self-aware method of comedy, in the hands of these
actors, offers an amusingly comical twist on the familiar “end of the world”
scenario. Watching normal people mock themselves at the onslaught of Armageddon
is far less funny than watching movie stars play extreme imitations of identities
the public associates with them.
Though the
acting is fairly straightforward, as most are playing alterations of past
characters, the contingent have a charming chemistry amidst their expletive
laced tirades and bromantic endearments. There are a few moments when the film
stalls, this mostly caused by the incorporation of the same joke done too many
times over. Also, as the film shifts more horrific midway with the inclusion of
more direct genre elements, some of the comedy is awkwardly forced by focusing
on breaking up the tension. It can become a difficult task of keeping the
narrative shifts coherent while allowing the comedic aspects room to remain.
Still, the sideways view of celebrity, and the integration of character
insecurities and surface facades, allows Goldberg and Rogen opportunity to
transition when the film seems to become complaisant.
This Is The
End is a funny, at times
hysterical, extreme caricature of the celebrity lifestyle interwoven within the
event of the biblical apocalypse. The strong ensemble cast holds the film together
even when the jokes become somewhat stale. And, though the film isn’t always
successfully balanced, the positive overshadows the negative in this brash and
clever horror infused comedy.
Monte’s Rating
4.00 out 5.00
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