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Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World

Original title: Nu astepta prea mult de la sfârsitul lumii
  • 2023
  • 2h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World (2023)
Quirky ComedySatireComedyDrama

An overworked and underpaid production assistant drives around Bucharest to shoot the casting for a workplace safety video commissioned by a multinational company.An overworked and underpaid production assistant drives around Bucharest to shoot the casting for a workplace safety video commissioned by a multinational company.An overworked and underpaid production assistant drives around Bucharest to shoot the casting for a workplace safety video commissioned by a multinational company.

  • Director
    • Radu Jude
  • Writer
    • Radu Jude
  • Stars
    • Ilinca Manolache
    • Ovidiu Pîrsan
    • Nina Hoss
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    5.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Radu Jude
    • Writer
      • Radu Jude
    • Stars
      • Ilinca Manolache
      • Ovidiu Pîrsan
      • Nina Hoss
    • 23User reviews
    • 82Critic reviews
    • 95Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 43 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Clip 1:55
    Trailer

    Photos65

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Ilinca Manolache
    Ilinca Manolache
    • Angela Raducani…
    Ovidiu Pîrsan
    • Ovidiu Pîrsan
    Nina Hoss
    Nina Hoss
    • Doris Goethe
    Dorina Lazar
    Dorina Lazar
    • Angela Coman
    László Miske
    László Miske
    • Gyuri
    Katia Pascariu
    Katia Pascariu
    • Ovidiu's Wife
    Sofia Nicolaescu
    Sofia Nicolaescu
    • Ilinca
    Costel Lepadatu
    Mariana Feraru
    Ciprian Anton
    Claudia Ieremia
    Serban Pavlu
    Serban Pavlu
    Nicodim Ungureanu
    Nicodim Ungureanu
    Alex M Dascalu
    • Dan Trofaila
    • (as Alex Dascalu)
    Ioana Iacob
    Rodica Negrea
    Rodica Negrea
    Adina Cristescu
    Adrian Nicolae
    • Director
      • Radu Jude
    • Writer
      • Radu Jude
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    7.45.4K
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    Featured reviews

    gortx

    Ambitious caustic Romanian tale

    DO NOT EXPECT TOO MUCH FROM THE END OF THE WORLD (2024). Radu Jude's caustic ramble about the state of mind of the Romanian public. Jude's film is intentionally messy and, seemingly, disorganized, but the filmmaker has a lot on his mind.

    The main protagonist is Angela Raducani (Ilinca Manolache; quite remarkable) a production assistant on a safety video being produced locally for an Austrian client. She's required to drive around all over the area, seemingly the only P. A. on the production. She interviews accident victims who are 'auditioning' to be the spokesperson for the industrial short. Jude intersperses extended clips from a 1981 Romanian film (ANGELA MOVES ON) about a taxi driver also named Angela. Jude sets up the contrast by saying his film is in 'conversation' with the earlier one. The two Angelas meet when the P. A is doing her vetting interviews. The older Angela is played by the same actress from the earlier film (Dorina Lazar).

    Jude uses various film and digital techniques (including aspect ratio) throughout. Slow motion, freeze frames and other tricks of the trade. Angela blows off steam by adopting a male alter ego - Bobita that she posts on social media, complete with cellphone camera filters. "Bobita" is an extreme misogynist in the Andrew Tate mold spouting the most vile rants imaginable. The movie is leisurely paced, but never dull. One fun side story involves Director Uwe Boll (playing himself) who is in town shooting a low budget sci-fi flick; Boll is introduced thusly: "He beats people up!"

    Jude's themes coalesce, more or less, in the final hour. The great German actress Nina Hoss (TAR, PHOENIX) arrives in Bucharest playing the Austrian producer, Doris Goethe. Angela picks her up and drives her to a hotel. The next day is the shoot which Jude films as a remarkable 40 minute single take. The victim's family (including the now elderly taxi driver Angela) is placed at the scene of his unfortunate accident on a dreary, rainy afternoon. Of course, the company responsible doesn't really want to hear from the man (Ovidiu Pirsan) as much as spread their propaganda using the 'victims' as human props. As the family sit in a dank alley in a light rain, they are told what to say and do over the phone by Doris as she sits comfortably in her well apportioned hotel.

    Jude is fully committed to his vision of Romania as a sad sack society. There's a mention of road so dangerous that citizens have put up crosses for those that have perished because of the government's indifference (it's a long montage). The nation is now 'free' from the Iron Curtain, but, it's leaders, including the much reviled Nicolae Ceausescu, have left deep wounds in the Romanian psyche. Being an EU member has only magnified the country's status on the lowest rung of that ladder. The two Angelas may represent two different generations, but, are their circumstance that much different? They each believe the "End of the World" is happening - and don't expect it to be a happy one.

    DO NOT EXPECT TOO MUCH FROM THE END OF THE WORLD is currently streaming on Mubi and is available for rental.
    8IrvinDanielD

    Society is a collective hallucination

    I live in Romania and this is the most acurate and realistic movie I've seen in my life and I watched over 2000 movies. I truly hope that life outside of Romania has another perspectives and values but I suspect that this toxic recipe is applied in all the "modern" countries of the world.

    The movie captures in a perfect way the hoax of a "modern" life, lived in a big city. Deppresion, anxiety, regrets, fake smiles, competition, survival, degeneration and destruction. The parralel drawn between the modern days presented in black and white and the communist times presented in colour mark a huge contrast between an organic way of life and this jungle we dare to call civilisation today.

    A huge masterpiece and an extremely harsh and realistic account of today's "society." Anyone who is more bothered by swearing than by corruption, ignorance and obedience is by definition a modern slave. This is the true message of the movie. It's time to stop exchanging fake smiles for money and status and start being human again.
    8Goloh

    Expected Little, Got a Lot

    After deducting one star for over-the-top vulgarity, much of that from protagonist Angela's TikTok alter ego Bobita; and one more star for being way too long; this left eight stars to work with, and the film earned them all. My first impression of Angela was dim, but she was just a tough, bright cookie doing her own thing - mostly driving, apparently -- in rough circumstances. Terrific acting.

    Can't say how well the "movie within a movie" device worked. I understand it was to provide both contrast and context, but after awhile it became intrusive and repetitive, like prolonged scenes of Angela's gum-chewing during relentless drives, and a wholly gratuitous sequence of highway fatality crosses. The scene at the end filming Ovidiu and his family is especially sharp, with quite a few lessons hidden in there.

    Not exactly sure why, but the film overall reminded me of Fellini's Nights of Cabiria ... not for any obvious reasons, but a similar tone.

    The ending was abrupt but appropriate and satisfying. Closing credits are wacky, not something I often see. Major credit too goes to whomever did the English subtitles: they were spot-on, very nuanced.

    Not too sure about how it makes Bucharest look, though.
    7brentsbulletinboard

    Inventive and Ambitious But Overlong

    Some may find it discouraging to look upon the world with a robustly cynical outlook, yet, given prevailing conditions in the world today, it may sometimes be unavoidable, an attribute reflected in many contexts, including art and cinema. And that's just what Romanian writer-director Radu Jude has done in his latest feature outing, a biting, darkly satirical comedy-drama that lays bare many of the everyday frustrations that his countrymen experience in areas like politics, corruption and economic opportunities. The film tells this story through the experiences of Angela Raducani (Ilinca Manolache), an overworked, underpaid, sleep-deprived movie production assistant as she struggles to make it through her daily work routine, an unappreciated effort not unlike that thrust upon many contemporary Romanians. To compensate for the tedium of her career and to let off some considerable pent-up steam, Angela makes short videos of her own featuring a foul-mouthed, sexually provocative male alter-ego, Bobitja, who swears like a sailor and describes explicit erotic encounters that would make a porn star blush. She also wrestles with the many self-serving demands of her arrogant Austrian corporate sponsors and a bloated Romanian bureaucracy that proves ineffectual in resolving property ownership issues related to her family's cemetery plots. Moreover, the picture draws uncanny parallels in the living and working conditions experienced by the nation's present-day residents with those who lived under the Communist dictatorship of Nicolae Ceausescu in the 1980s, presented here through intercut thematically linked film clips from the 1982 Romanian melodrama "Angela merge mai departe" ("Angela Moves Forward"), the story of a taxi driver whose circumstances mirror those of the beleaguered PA. It all makes for quite an intriguing and engaging mix of story elements, one the holds viewer attention well for about two-thirds of the release, especially in its deliciously bawdy, ribald humor. However, with a 2:43:00 runtime, it becomes somewhat trying as a comedy (and as a movie overall), serving up an excess of almost everything. Unlike comparably long offerings such as "Triangle of Sadness" (2022), which manage to successfully sustain their humor for such a lengthy duration, this effort starts getting repetitive, running out of gas to keep propelling it forward, especially in the somewhat exasperating final half-hour. Like Jude's previous release, "Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn" ("Barbardeala cu bucluc sau porno balamuc") (2021), this outing definitely could have benefitted from some judicious editing, particularly in its endless footage of the protagonist driving through heavy Bucharest traffic. To the filmmaker's credit, "End of the World" deserves kudos for its irreverence and its ambitious inventiveness and willingness to try the untried, but this is yet another example of a project where the creator fails to kill his darlings, an undertaking that could have been accomplished successfully in lobbing off about 20 minutes of extraneous material, especially in the closing moments. This one is worth a look if you're willing to be patient with it, as that's essential to make your way through all the way to the end. But, if you don't go in with that attitude, you might be expecting too much from the end of the film.
    10fegaldino

    "Are there vegetarian between the cannibals?"

    Absolute film. This stunning protagonist takes us to inside the car and also into the reality of the romenian proletariat. Her daily vlogs as a man character on social media's make criticism uncomfortably funny.

    Flashes of "Angela goes on" sometimes fit perfectly with romenians women's nowadays issues, especially as a car driver. On the other hand, at other times, it highlights the aberrant contrast behind different eras: "it's later than you think".

    Personally, as a third world citizen, this universal theme brought up by the film touches me deeply. Government corruption, nonsense ideological fanaticism among people, and our impotence in the face of all of this.

    Uncomfortable until the end and necessary.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      All of the car scenes were filmed in real-life Bucharest traffic.
    • Connections
      Features Casablanca (1942)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 3, 2024 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Romania
      • Luxembourg
      • France
      • Croatia
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
    • Languages
      • Romanian
      • English
      • German
      • Hungarian
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • No esperes demasiado del fin del mundo
    • Filming locations
      • Bucharest, Romania
    • Production companies
      • 4 Proof Film
      • Bord Cadre Films
      • Kinorama
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $73,983
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,626
      • Mar 24, 2024
    • Gross worldwide
      • $92,360
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 43m(163 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • D-Cinema 48kHz 5.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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