Apocalypse films
have riddled our cinemas in the last decade, but in a surprising turn of events
some of the most successful of this summer have been comedies. This is the End was as Hollywood as
possible, while the somewhat similarly titled The World’s End is the final film in the extremely popular British
films directed by Edgar Wright. The
World’s End is the final film in the Cornetto Trilogy (also known as the
‘Blood and Ice Cream’ Trilogy), which began with Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz.
Keeping true to
the themes of male friendship paired with a melancholy about youth lost, The
World’s End is a fitting end to the trilogy. Simon Pegg serves as our narrator,
and the film’s most volatile and unpredictable character, Gary King. Struggling
to adjust to the idea of being an adult as he reaches middle-age, King
convinces his former cohorts of youth (Nick Frost, Martin Freeman, Eddie Marsan
and Paddy Considine) for a return visit down memory lane. They attempt a pub
crawl 20 years after they failed it the first time, and somehow become
entangled in a robotic overtaking of sorts.