Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA look at how a painter and a successful actor spend their last day together before the world comes to an end.A look at how a painter and a successful actor spend their last day together before the world comes to an end.A look at how a painter and a successful actor spend their last day together before the world comes to an end.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Man on phone
- (Synchronisation)
- Friend of Dealer
- (as Judy Salazar)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The story is about how two particular people would spend their last hours on earth if they new the world was coming to and end at a specific time. The story contains little fanfare and no special effects. It did remind me of a play more than a movie, as was mentioned by another reviewer. The story of the two main actors is interspersed with a variety of spiritual leaders weighing in on such weighty matters as good, evil and the meaning of life. Hard to convey much depth given the brevity of these interviews.
At one point one of the characters decides to visit an old friend and his walk thru the city reminds us all that people are still drinking, hookers are still hooking and most importantly lounge singers are still singing. Nice to know that we would all stay in character right till the end. I guess I better go see that new movie today since the world is going to end tomorrow... It all just seems a little improbable and hollow.
The acting was good but would have been better with a much more well thought out script.
This film must have been pure profit for the makers. I think about 20 percent of it must have been archived footage from around the world. The biggest problem I had with this movie is that it reminded me of a mediocre film school project at best. It tried to be artsy but failed. It tried to be philosophical but failed. It tried to be an emotional tale of a shared ending and failed. It tried to tie all these together with the worst music and sound effects that I have heard in some time. My ears are still ringing. Do yourself a favor and stay away from this one unless you happen to be in the mood to be severely underwhelmed.
No bang, no whimper, just kind of a fizzle...
** (out of 4)
Abel Ferrara's look at the final day on Earth centers on an actor (Willem Dafoe) and his painter girlfriend (Shanyn Leigh) as both of them have different emotions on the big day. 4:44 LAST DAY ON EARTH isn't a complete success but it's not the disaster that some people made it out to be. It's pretty strange that with so many stories that could be told about the final day, director Ferrara took a rather bland couple to make a film about. These people basically have sex, talk, paint, fight and try to come to terms with dying. None of this stuff is all that extraordinary and it doesn't even seem like Ferrara wanted to do anything too outrageous. For the most part the film is pretty simple from start to finish and it's quite laid back as well. Those expecting something crazy from the controversial director aren't going to find it here, although we are treated to one rather graphic sex scene. The performances for the most part are extremely good with Dafoe stealing the film but this here isn't anything new. The actor is so calm, cool and collective in the part that the character becomes quite memorable even though he isn't given much to do in the story. Leigh is also good in her part as is Natasha Lyonne and Paul Hipp in their small roles. 4:44 LAST DAY ON EARTH is far from bad but at the same time the entire picture just has a bland feel to it. Fans of the director or Dafoe might want to check it out but others should probably stay away.
Ferrara's choice to shoot the majority of the film in one setting with a minimal amount of takes made me feel as if I were watching a play - not at all a bad thing, especially when the lead actor is Dafoe. This play setting, along with the 'the sky is falling' scenario practically begs for fueled performances to which both Dafoe and Leigh delivered. The actors made the most of their surroundings and turned their emoting skills on high, only occasionally finding themselves being caught in fits of overacting. This is where the movie falters, when the attention pays too much to the acting and not the scenario. Still, the little bursts of over-the- top moments weren't enough to detract me from the movie as a whole.
Fans of both doomsday scenario movies and movies that show close-ups of Willem Dafoe's pubic region should walk away eerily pleased from this one.
"4:44 Last Day on Earth" is a boring and dramatic movie by Abel Ferrara disclosing the last day on Earth of a couple of lovers in New York. The movie seems to be sponsored by the Skype with many calls from their apartment using this software. The uninteresting plot is basically a filmed storyline with the usual use of religious images by Ferrara and nothing else. My vote is three.
Title (Brazil): "4:44 - O Fim do Mundo" ("4:44 - Last Day on Earth")
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesLast film of Anita Pallenberg.
- Zitate
Cisco: At 4:44 EST tomorrow morning, give or take a few seconds, the world will come to an end. It will be the result of the ever-weakening ozone layer, which has now thinned and dissipated far more rapidly than even the worst doom-sayer could have imagined. So the final explosion, the meltdown will come. With fair warning but no possible means of escape. There will be no survivors. The world will end.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Brows Held High: Melancholia (2012)
- SoundtracksBlindfold Blues
Written by 'Abel Ferrara'
Performed by 'Francis Kuipers'
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 17.801 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 8.355 $
- 25. März 2012
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 70.851 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 22 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1