Okay. Imagine that Tarkovsky’s ‘The Sacrifice’ took
place not in a remote dacha but a couple of miles from the Hollywood sign, that
its protagonists were not a group of moody cerebral eastern Europeans but a
cluster of egomaniacal actors, and that its coming apocalypse was signalled not
by portentous reports on the radio but by the arrival of a Godzilla-sized demon
with a penis of fire …
I’m not selling you on this, am I?
Okay. Remember when one of your mates first got a camcorder
and a whole bunch of you decided you’d make a movie over the weekend only you
put effort into drinking, smoking weed and arguing about what topping to order
on your pizza than you did actually scripting the thing or worrying too much about
blocking, camera-work, direction and, y’know, general coherence? And remember
when you watched the resultant opus, some time later, stone cold sober, and
realised it was an egregious embarrassment that ought never be seen by another
human being? ‘This is the End’ is kind of like that, but made by celebrities
and with a special effects budget. Oh, and there are actually some decent lines
and a few scenes manage to land the occasional satirical punch, and …
I’m still not selling you on this, am I?
Hey, guys: for anyone who’s ever wanted to see Michael
Cera impaled by a street light, Rihanna swallowed by a pit of fire, Emma Watson
wielding an axe, and a bunch of over-privileged celebrities degenerate into
full-on slanging matches over rights to a bar of Milky Way, the dividing up of
a piece of cheese, and who jizzed on James Franco’s porno mag, then buddy THIS
IS THE MOTHERFUCKING MOVIE FOR YOU!!!!
By the way, that splurge of capital letters and
overdose of exclamation marks, hammered home with the expletive, is intended to
introduce the reader, gently, into the brash aesthetic of the movie. The, ahem,
plot involves Jay Baruchel, Seth Rogen, Craig Robinson, Jonah Hill and Danny
McBride – all playing versions, spoofs or public perceptions of themselves,
sometimes all of these things within the same, ahem, characterisation –
converging at James Franco’s house for a party. Franco also plays a version of
himself. Baruchel and Rogen nip down the block for a pack of smokes. The
rapture happens. They freak out and head back to the party and ostensibly
safety. However, the End of Days doesn’t give a flying fuck about their
combined box office clout and hellfire rains down, a pit of fire ruins Franco’s
lawn, and demons run amok. A small band of survivors scream at each other, run
around and trade in sick humour for the next hour and a half. The overriding
impression is that you wouldn’t want to hang out with them on a good day, let
alone the Day of Judgement.
‘This is the End’ is bludgeoningly unsubtle, juvenile
to the point of emotional retardation, and vulgar in a way that makes you
wonder whether the script was actually written or simply assembled from a
horrible alphabet soup created by sticking the spleens and bowels of Roy Chubby
Brown, Andrew Dice Clay and Sam Kinison in a blender until various combinations
of dick, piss and man-boob titty-fucking jokes bubbled up to the surface.
It should be utterly dire. It should be reprehensible.
It should be the kind of film that earns a zero-word count on Agitation. And it
is, at multiple points in its running time, all of these things. But it’s also
genuinely funny and unexpectedly inventive at times. A running gag about a
possible sequel to ‘Pineapple Express’ pays off in a sequel that recalls ‘Be
Kind Rewind’, and there’s a send-up of ‘The Exorcist’ that is much much funnier
than it has any right to be.
‘This is the End’ is not, by any set of critical
perameters, a good movie. It’s not a movie I’d have any reason to watch again.
But I laughed more often than not while I was watching it, and sometimes that’s
all that’s needed.
I had fun with it, I realize it isn't high art, but it wasnt trying to be, in fact, it was trying to go as low as possible. I agree wit you, that Exorcist parody was funnier then it had any right to be, I mean, considering they've spoofed that very same scene thousands of times already, you'd think it couldnt be milked any more...yet there I was, laughing my ass off.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Franco. That 'Exorcist' spoof really sealed the deal for me. It would have been so easy to do that scene badly, but they mined comedy gold out of it. The intensity of Baruchel doing the "power of Christ compels you" line is wonderfully punctured by how dismissively Hill responds "You're not very compelling."
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