The World's End: Simon Pegg and his uber best buddy Nick Frost are in action again, in another society-hasn't-got-a-blinking-clue conspiracy theory movie. Gary (Pegg), a chronic alcoholic and drug abuser, has decided to get his band of high school mates back together to have another go at "The Golden Mile:" a pub crawl around Newton Haven that concludes at The World's End--not knowing that his hometown appears different for a reason. The film only reaches the deleriously-inspired heights of Shaun of the Dead at the end of the movie, when Pegg and Frost confront the evil Network, but the rest is an unexpectedly intimate look at aging dreams, both lost and found, and has some of the best-choreographed fight scenes this side of the Pacific Ocean. The middle section can get a bit repetitve: They drink, they fight, they drink some more; sometimes they dispense with drinking altogether and just fight; sometimes they drink while they're fighting, all the while splattered in blue goop and talking about how great their unhappy lives are. But director Edgar Wright is a master at comic chaos and he paces his film expertly--TWE is never boring. A grandly entertaining slapstick masterpiece that had me crying from prolonged laughter, TWE is one that should not be missed.
4.5/5
4.5/5
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