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Comment j'ai fêté la fin du monde

Original title: Cum mi-am petrecut sfârsitul lumii
  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Comment j'ai fêté la fin du monde (2006)
Drama

In Communist-era Romania, people live with hope for a new life of freedom.In Communist-era Romania, people live with hope for a new life of freedom.In Communist-era Romania, people live with hope for a new life of freedom.

  • Director
    • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
  • Writers
    • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
    • Andreea Valean
    • Veronick Codolban Kazansky
  • Stars
    • Dorotheea Petre
    • Timotei Duma
    • Ioan Albu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
    • Writers
      • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
      • Andreea Valean
      • Veronick Codolban Kazansky
    • Stars
      • Dorotheea Petre
      • Timotei Duma
      • Ioan Albu
    • 26User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos8

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Dorotheea Petre
    Dorotheea Petre
    • Eva Matei - A 17-Year-Old Girl
    Timotei Duma
    Timotei Duma
    • Lalalilu 'Lali' Matei - Eva's Little Brother
    Ioan Albu
    Sergiu Anghel
    • The Headmaster
    Adrian Bulboaca
    • The Second Guitarist
    Ion Carangea
    Jean Constantin
    Jean Constantin
    • Uncle Floricã
    Mircea Diaconu
    Mircea Diaconu
    • Grigore Matei - Eva and Lali's Father
    Bogdan Dumitrache
    Bogdan Dumitrache
    • The Doctor
    Liviu Fister
    John Maldea
    Adrian Nicolae
    • The First Guitarist
    Stellan Nicolae
    • Llotari curta nea Tei
    Vasile Nicolae
    • Llotari curta nea Tei
    Cristian Nicolaie
    • Nucu
    Nicolae Praida
    • Nea Titi
    Adrian Rosu
    • Oase
    Marius Stan
    • Tarzan - Lali's pal
    • Director
      • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
    • Writers
      • Cãtãlin Mitulescu
      • Andreea Valean
      • Veronick Codolban Kazansky
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    7.13.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10anamarie_dot_com

    A great capture of the communist era

    I have just seen this movie and I loved it. Maybe for the little boy who plays his role very well, maybe for the strange relationship that Eva has with either guys, but especially for how the director managed to capture the communist era in every aspect of the movie. Romanians may understand this better. The revolution took place almost 17 years ago, a new regime was installed since then and almost everything has changed. But this movie brings back even the smallest detail, from the clothes that students wore, music they listened to, even haircuts they had, to the state of the streets, houses, cars. It's amazing, but I had the strong impression that the movie was made many years ago. I would recommend this movie to all Romanians because, in a small detail, it gives a different perspective about the revolution. But also, non-Romanians should watch it just to see how difficult times we have been through.
    9tionfiul-1

    A beautiful coming of age story during Communist Romania

    Not too strong on plot, "How I spent the end of the world" is strong on mood and feeling, and it very well compensates. I usually don't go crazy about "mood pieces" but this is definitely more. I caught the film at the up and coming Transylvania Film Festival (Tiff for short) where the film had its national premiere after a decent reception at Cannes only a few weeks earlier. The film is a MUST for any Romanian who has lived through the Ceausescu years as the filmmakers went through great pains to accurately depict the mood of those days from general landscape to the toy trucks, school uniforms and furniture all Romanians possessed and shared during an era of uniform mass-production. The film stands out as the harbinger of something historians will hopefully refer to as "the Romanian New Wave." With films like this, and "Marilena from P7" as well as Porumboiu's "Has it Been, Has it not Been" (another personal take on the shattering Revolution of 1989), Romanian cinema is finally entering the world circuit, and will hopefully stay there for a while.
    10kausalyia_inm

    the most poetic presentation of the communist regime

    I've seen the film by mistake as there was nothing else on TV...i didn't what it was about but the title seemed exciting...What can I say?It was absolutely breath taking...Although most people would dismiss it as being yet another stupid film about communism,I would say that this one is by far the best Romanian film in quite a while...And the nomination for the Academy's Awards says it all...I loved because it was simple...It didn't make use of complex language or of extraordinary characters...It just showed the true face of Romania under the communist regime....It had beautiful characters...The images were perfect...The music was perfect...It's a small piece of jewelery...And what's more...Dorotheea is absolutely stunning...:D
    6tributarystu

    Happy Sad

    I've been trying to watch all Romanian films of late, although without much success. Some are just too ludicrous and others simply can't arouse any interest on my behalf.

    I'd seen Trafic from Mitulescu, a slice of life piece from the busy happenings of Bucharest, which was a celebrated achievement of Romanian cinema at that time - with some merit. Now, "Cum mi-am petrecut sfarsitul lumii" is, firstly, a film with a striking title that can lead you on - erroneously. Going beyond the metaphor, I guess you can accept it as what the end of communism symbolized: the end of an era.

    The film itself is about a young girl, Eva, (very well played by D. Petre) who is not only passing through the usual problems which come with adolescence, but who must also bear the weight of communism and its effects on her shoulders. I myself saw in her a prototype of the modern woman, the one who wants to think for herself and act as she deems is correct (but who also understands the importance of sacrificing herself at times), and all this burden of age and political restraints are fantastically mirrored on D. Petre's face. However, the film doesn't really go far beyond illustrating the last segment of the Ceausescu era - the fear, the hate, the desire to flee. While Eva's constant struggle, between responsibility (family) and rebellion, does deliver a certain dose of tension and dynamics, the film felt unsatisfying in the end.

    What I'm referring to is that feeling you expect to encounter after a rather warm film about a different kind of childhood with a rather different sort of dreams: that overwhelming experience of fulfillment - both what the characters are concerned and the audience. So while "Cum mi-am petrecut sfarsitul lumii" has its good moments and conveys a very true perspective of those days, it simply did not satisfy me. Maybe it's the fact that I "missed out" on the era and, consequently, can't truly understand them. But what I felt was real enough for me, so the problem must lie within the story.
    10adrian-claudiu

    A beautiful film about the hard times of our childhood when we still dreamed

    Beautiful indeed. The beauty of this film is that it presents with high fidelity a era not so long ago in our life but so long ago in our memories. It's like you were closing your eyes and go back in those time. The atmosphere is recreated in the smallest details. Even the bottles of milk are the same they were 20 years ago. The director is not a judge, he just presents facts through eyes of different persons, as he recreates the every day life of people. this film is not a film of hate as we were used 17 years when we saw film about that times. It is a film to see with your heart open, with your soul free of any ideeas. It is a film of making peace with the past and with ourself. Take just little from your time and go see it.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Romania's official submission to the 79th Academy Awards (2007) for Best Foreign Language Film.
    • Goofs
      There is a longer scene in the movie showing a bus trying to turn around on muddy soil. The bus is a Rocar bus, which has been produced only after 1990, and it has stickers on its doors, which surely have not been used before 1989.
    • Soundtracks
      Marsul de Intampinace
      Written by anonymous

      Copyright 2006 by Strada Films & Les Films Pelléas

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    FAQ17

    • How long is How I Celebrated the End of the World?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 30, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Romania
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official site (Romania)
    • Language
      • Romanian
    • Also known as
      • How I Celebrated the End of the World
    • Filming locations
      • Romania
    • Production companies
      • Acht Frankfurt
      • Briarcliff Films
      • Canal+
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €1,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $296,980
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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