The End
critic Reviews
, 54% Rotten Tomatometer Score- The End doesn't lack for ambition or talent, but its bold vision is ill-served by a bloated runtime and monotonous musical score.
- , Rotten Tomatometer ScoreChristy LemireFilmWeek (KPCC - NPR Los Angeles)
I really wanted to like this, but the songs do not work.
Read full article - , Rotten Tomatometer ScoreElizabeth WeitzmanTime Out
Oppenheimer’s apocalyptic eccentricity is admirable for its ambition, which often feels nearly endless—as, alas, does the film itself.
Read full article - , Fresh Tomatometer ScoreAdam GrahamDetroit News
For all its ambitions, "The End" does grow tedious, and at two and a half hours, it's overkill. But it's unsettling in ways that linger long after the end credits roll, and disturbing in what it has to say about us...
Read full article - , Fresh Tomatometer ScoreTy BurrWashington Post
Oppenheimer has made a chamber play of and for the damned, and while it never fully escapes the laboratory of ideas, it shows a daring and lethally sharp creative mind at work. More, please.
Read full article - , Rotten Tomatometer ScoreRichard WhittakerAustin Chronicle
As actual modern technocrats dream of escaping environmental catastrophe by fleeing to Mars, Oppenheimer’s staid vision of the splendid isolation of the upper class is nowhere near as ambitious as it needs to be.
Read full article - , Rotten Tomatometer ScoreRichard RoeperChicago Sun-Times
By the time we finally reach the end of “The End,” we’re thinking it’s a damn shame that these thinly drawn, self-involved caricatures were the ones who survived the apocalypse, while billions of presumably more interesting people were swept away.
Read full article - , Fresh Tomatometer ScoreNathan ChizenExclaim!
It's what happens if we don't change.
Read full article - , Fresh Tomatometer ScoreLisa LamanCulturess
The End’s erratically successful creative bravura frequently charmed me.
Read full article - , Fresh Tomatometer ScoreSean P. MeansThe Movie Cricket
The fact that the family that is riding out the apocalypse in director Joshua Oppenheimer’s “The End” does sing their feelings, in emotional musical numbers, adds to the absurdity of this strangely beautiful movie.
Read full article - , Rotten Tomatometer ScoreWade MajorFilmWeek (KPCC - NPR Los Angeles)
It's just aimless. "The End," ironically, never seems to be heading toward one.
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