Plot
As an asteroid nears Earth, a man finds himself alone after his wife leaves in a panic. He decides to take a road trip to reunite with his high school sweetheart. Accompanying him is a neighbor who inadvertently puts a wrench in his plan.
Release Year: 2012
Rating: 7.0/10 (233 voted)
Critic's Score: 60/100
Director:
Lorene Scafaria
Stars: Steve Carell, Keira Knightley, Melanie Lynskey
Storyline An asteroid named "Matilda" is on a collision course towards Earth and in three weeks the world will come to an absolute end. What would you do if your life and the world were doomed? One man decides to spend his time searching for his long lost love from high school during the coming catastrophe.
Cast: Brad Morris
-
Radio Announcer
Steve Carell
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Dodge
Nancy Carell
-
Linda
Mark Moses
-
Anchorman
Roger Aaron Brown
-
Alfred
Rob Huebel
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Jeremy
Trisha Gorman
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Crying Woman
Keira Knightley
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Penny
Adam Brody
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Owen
Tonita Castro
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Elsa
Leslie Murphy
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Amy
Connie Britton
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Diane
Rob Corddry
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Warren
Kasey Campbell
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Danny
Melanie Lynskey
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Karen
Taglines:
Nice knowing you.
Release Date: 22 June 2012
Filming Locations: Santa Clarita, California, USA
Technical Specs
Runtime:
User Review
Impending Doom With a Side of Honey
Rating: 9/10
Everyone knows about the calm that happens before the storm. In
"Seeking A Friend for the End of the World", what's amazing is just how
long that calm lasts.
Throughout the first part of this film, you can't help but wonder, as
you watch, how you would react if you heard nonchalant reports on radio
and TV about a 70-mile wide asteroid heading for Earth and destroying
life as we know it. Would you seek refuge in a fallout shelter and hope
for the best, or say "To hell with it!" and do all the things you
couldn't do when there was established order with a purpose?
Dodge (Steve Carell) seems to find a third option no one else even
tries to consider: sitting calmly and maintaining his own order as
virtually everyone else is participating in an orgy or a riot. While
being calm works for him as a survival instinct, it also reflects his
loneliness. The more people surrounding him, the lonelier he seems.
Very similar to Bill Murray's character in "Lost In Translation",
Carell is great at conveying so much despite doing so little. It
becomes all the more fascinating when he's the only character in the
movie who does not through caution into the wind. After all, would you
be this calm if the world was going to end?
Keira Knightley is Penny, a vibrant but distraught British woman who
lives in the same building as Dodge. She appears one night outside his
window, and is frantically crying after her realization that she can't
fly back home to Great Britain to see her family. Knightley serves as a
great contrast to Carell in many ways, and she is a welcome presence in
this movie. And I am SO glad the film didn't try to cover her sweet
British accent.
The film evolves into a sort of road-trip movie when a riot ensues
outside their apartment building, and Dodge persuades Penny to drive to
Somerset, Delaware because he knows someone who owns an airplane. As it
turns out, Dodge also had a high school girlfriend who wrote to him a
few months earlier, before his wife left him.
Sounds like a familiar journey from another movie? Well, "Seeking A
Friend For The End of the World" takes you in one direction you think
you're going, and then often makes a sharp left when you least expect
it. The movie is also funnier than the title suggests, has some
startling moments I never saw coming nor expected, and keeps you
watching for many reasons.
Is there a love story between Dodge and Penny? Like the recent "Salmon
Fishing In The Yemen" (2012), you find yourself unsure if the two main
characters should fall in love, or if there is at least a little
attraction, or if it really makes any difference.
There are other things you wonder while watching this movie. Most
notably, is the world really going to end? Everyone in this movie seems
to think so. While it's fascinating to see how different characters
react to the news, you keep watching because you want to see if it
really does. It can't be a dream or a delusion, can it?
It's great that in a summer season of action flicks and disaster films,
there's one film that takes its time showing how ordinary people react
to extraordinary things. There's an asteroid headed towards Earth, but
there are no explosions, deaths, astronauts, superheroes, or even
(surprisingly) camera shots of the sky in this movie whatsoever.
Moviegoers who hated "Armageddon" (1998) will be relieved, I'm sure.
Besides Carell and Knightley, other fairly well-known actors show up so
briefly, their appearances could practically be considered cameos.
Still, every performance by everyone involved stays with you to the
point where you probably pinpoint one character and say, "Yeah, I'd
probably be THAT guy given the circumstances". As the doomsday clock
counts down and the movie ends, you may find yourself reevaluating what
you want the last image in your mind to be before it's all over.
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