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Everything in the End

  • 2021
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
228
YOUR RATING
Helga Kristín Helgadóttir in Everything in the End (2021)
Stranded in a small village during Earth's final days, a man seeks solace in the brief human connections he encounters.
Play trailer2:00
1 Video
10 Photos
Drama

Stranded in a small village during Earth's final days, a man seeks solace in the brief human connections he encounters.Stranded in a small village during Earth's final days, a man seeks solace in the brief human connections he encounters.Stranded in a small village during Earth's final days, a man seeks solace in the brief human connections he encounters.

  • Director
    • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
  • Writer
    • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
  • Stars
    • Hugo de Sousa
    • Bergdis Julia Johannsdottir
    • Lilja Þórisdóttir
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    228
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
    • Writer
      • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
    • Stars
      • Hugo de Sousa
      • Bergdis Julia Johannsdottir
      • Lilja Þórisdóttir
    • 11User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Official Trailer

    Photos10

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    Top cast12

    Edit
    Hugo de Sousa
    Hugo de Sousa
    • Paulo
    Bergdis Julia Johannsdottir
    Bergdis Julia Johannsdottir
    • Theodora
    Lilja Þórisdóttir
    • Ana
    Joi Johannsson
    Joi Johannsson
    • Kristjan
    Elizabeth Austin
    • Liz
    Gunnar Ragnarsson
    • Addi
    Raúl Portero
    • Olmo
    Reynir Ingvason
    • Mias
    Kolbrún Erna Pétursdóttir
    Ylfa Marín Haraldsdóttir
    • Clerk
    Helga Kristín Helgadóttir
    Helga Kristín Helgadóttir
    Fríða María Ásbergsdóttir
    • Extra
    • Director
      • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
    • Writer
      • Mylissa Fitzsimmons
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.0228
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    Featured reviews

    8danielplatt-74423

    Cathartic Viewing

    "Everything in the End" is a meditative, beautifully shot film that explores themes of grief, mortality, and the end of the world. The performances by the cast, particularly Hugo De Sousa as Paulo, but actually everyone involved, are fantastic. The film invites viewers to observe and think about the human connections made in the face of an impending apocalypse and rewards viewers with an incredibly cathartic experience. The stunning Icelandic landscape serves as a backdrop for the story, and the film is described as being filled with simple, spontaneous, and poignant moments of human connection. Honestly, fantastic.
    10ekuska

    Very meditative gorgeous experience

    This film really allows a lot of space to be right along these characters, on their lost meanderings, as they attempted to make some last connections. I felt it was similar in tone to another spacious film, Nomadland. Where it was fine with letting characters be alone for a while, and you could breath it all in with them. I enjoyed every windy moment of it.
    10tommycreagh

    A breathtaking meditation on apocalypse & grief from a refreshingly simple & movingly human perspective.

    I went to see 'Everything in the End' at IndieCork last month knowing very little about the film or the director Mylissa Fitzsimmons. I was intrigued by the synopsis and image in the programme enough to go to the film and had the feeling that it was either going to be really good or really bad. As a film that was about earth's final days I was just praying that zombies wouldn't be making an appearance. And my god, was I pleasantly surprised.

    The film is beautiful, meditatively paced, and wonderfully simple. The story follows a troubled young man, Paulo, as he navigates Iceland's tormented and unforgiving landscape that rhymes with the grief and existential dread the character is experiencing. Paulo is a sensitive, gentle soul, played by Hugo De Sousa with a great deal of vulnerability and enough angst to rival Søren Kierkegaard. He finds himself for some seemingly unknown reason on foreign shores in the last days of earth, when an equally obscure natural, or perhaps unnatural, disaster is imminent that will wipe out all of humanity. Everyone knows this, and everyone is trying to make peace with themselves, with the universe, and reach out to others and connect in their final days. This is when the film gets really interesting as it is not so much about the impending apocalypse but the connections Paulo makes with others in his final moments, and these moments are simple, spontaneous, and beautifully human.

    The film is made up of so many beautiful, fleetingly joyful, scenes, that play so bittersweetly given the context that surrounds them. The characters voices are sometimes almost lost to the wind and the overwhelming presence of nature stands over the small events of the story. But it is not so much about the words, Fitzsimmons makes this clear, many scenes are without dialogue or, as said, cannot be heard and there are many other languages in the film that are not translated. The film, it seems, is more about the actions of the characters and the humanity that they all share. Paulo's motivations are intriguing, he connects deeply with each character but must keep going, bound by some hidden pilgrimage that leads him to his last end. There is almost something Dantean about it in that regard. It also reminded me somewhat of Von Trier's Melancholia and the idea that when we are grieving or in despair, it feels like the whole world is ending. In this sense I do not think the film is meant to be taken completely literally, it is an inner landscape that Paulo is struggling through and it is a film that is meant to be felt rather than logically understood.

    The free and spontaneous cinematography capturing the breathtakingly stark beauty of Iceland also reminded me somewhat of Terrence Malick's later work. Cinematographer Todd Hickey has a poetic attention to detail; a close up of a toppled teacup rocking from side to side, some empty clothes pegs shivering in the cold; whilst also paying attention to the vastness of the surroundings and nature's rising fury as the end approaches. I was actually surprised that the film was made by an American crew as I felt that the study of landscape, the style, and pacing all felt very Icelandic!

    This film brought up a hell of a lot for me in a very brief hour and fifteen minutes, and the slow burn, meditative pace allows you to reflect more deeply upon its themes. The thing that I found so clever and moving about the film is that director Mylissa Fitzsimmons breaks down all of the background noise of the modern world and culture. The impending doom makes everything irrelevant, everything except basic human connection and closure. We are all going to die, this is what Fitzsimmons is reminding us of, but not in a morose or depressing way but an empathetic, and strangely uplifting way. It reminds us of what life is really about when it comes to the end; love, interconnectivity, and the simple joys of shared human experience. These values are, after all, everything in the end.

    Highly recommended.
    3urkus

    Not mu cup of tea

    I love nature and Iceland, the cinema from this land ; so that was a very good opportunity to watch it. Even it had many nomination a prices. But I don´t found any reason in the argument.

    Not solid, very experimental but not worth your time, even it is very fast 1 hour and a cuarter. But you feel like you are watching and endless movie.

    I find no point, they speak different lenguajes (not traduced in the subtitles) you don´t understand anything, nothing is explained for you the principle character hasn´t got any personality.

    The only thing I could say about that is the beautiful cinematography, but with Iceland as set it is no difficult to shot something bad.

    3 stars out of 10.
    10symplvision

    Beautiful film, fantastic script

    The amazing visuals in this film are nicely balanced with a couple big topics: grieving, dealing with mortality, the end of the world. The solemnly heavy themes are magically offset by a powerfully subtle call-without an ounce of being preachy-for love and kindness and I left the film inspired to be a better person. Riveting acting performances amidst the Icelandic landscape calibrate the pace and bring viewers into an immersive and intimate experience. Highly recommend for all lovers of film, especially the themes mentioned above.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 12, 2022 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Iceland
    • Official sites
      • Directors Official Website
      • film website
    • Languages
      • Icelandic
      • English
      • Portuguese
    • Production companies
      • Bearly There Media
      • Hello Charles Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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