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Open Bar at 'The World's End'


Enter the world of Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg, and Nick Frost - the unstoppable Brit trio that brought us Shaun of the Dead (2004) and Hot Fuzz (2007). The World's End is the third installment of the Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy, in which each film has featured a different Cornetto ice cream flavour. Strange, but slightly intriguing. The trilogy series has incorporated some kind of otherworldly element, almost intruding on what could always be a standalone comedy in the beginning of each film. Tell me more you say? 

One pint science fiction. One pint street fighter. Two shots comedy. (my tag line)

It's just eleven more pubs to go at The Golden Mile pub crawl to reach The World's End, the final pub in the Newton Haven drinking marathon that five estranged childhood friends reunite to conquer once and for all. It is the final pub which the lads had never reached 20 years prior in their glory days: 1990. Simon Pegg is hilarious as Gary King, a living-in-the-90s-goth currently in AA, who still has his friend's mix tape in the deck of "the beast" (his youth car). King is determined to round up the booze troupe, especially his bestie Andy (Nick Frost), all of whom are mostly married professionals, and head back to the crawl to complete the binge mission. The five musketeers start to notice something off about the town and question who it is that has really changed. The pubs seem to be normaloid chains, all mimicking the look of the previous, without substance... and the people - robotic stiffs.    

The World's End is an apocalypse comedy about questioning friendship, society, and seeking closure. Who really is human has become hard to decipher. Why should we feel forced to change our style or personality to meet social standards? And if one doesn't do so, why is he the one judged upon? Alien outsiders have been reprogrammed to conform and act in unison. Who does that serve, really?

Director Edgar Wright's signature quick cuts, Nick Frost's 90s WWF moves on aliens, and Simon Pegg's Sisters of Mercy tattoo is all worth your buck. The Britpop soundtrack is also spot on with Suede, Pulp, and The Stone Roses treats for your ears. Do you remember the first time that happened during an alien invasion? Drink up.

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