- Source: The Endless (film)
- Source: The Endless Film
The Endless is a 2017 American science fiction horror film directed, produced by and starring Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead. Benson wrote the film, while Moorhead was the cinematographer; both also acted as editors. It premiered on April 21, 2017, at the Tribeca Film Festival, before being released nationwide on April 6, 2018.
Co-starring Callie Hernandez, Tate Ellington, Lew Temple, and James Jordan, the film tells the story of two brothers (Benson and Moorhead) who visit an alleged cult to which they formerly belonged. The Endless may be interpreted as a partial sequel to Benson and Moorhead's 2012 film Resolution, as it shares the same universe and some of the same characters. It received favorable reviews from critics.
Plot
Brothers Justin and Aaron Smith receive a video cassette from Camp Arcadia, a group they belonged to as young children. The two's recollection of events differ; while Aaron recalls them as a harmless and friendly commune, Justin thinks the group was a UFO death cult. Aaron points out that the video cassette proves the members are still alive. Justin, however, is worried that talk of "ascension" may be a code for some future mass suicide. Fed up with their inability to make friends or find good jobs since leaving Camp Arcadia, Aaron and Justin decide to return for just one day.
They head to Camp Arcadia in the backwoods outside of San Diego and receive a friendly welcome. None of the members seem to have aged in the decade since their departure. Among them, Anna and Lizzy take an interest in Aaron and Justin, respectively. While Aaron welcomes the attention, Justin keeps his distance. One of the members, Hal, excitedly shows Justin a physics equation he has been working on. He says that he cannot explain what it represents, as it would be akin to describing an impossible color. However, he hopes that Justin will eventually accept the group's beliefs now that he is older. As they partake in various activities, Aaron grows increasingly fond of the camp, and convinces Justin to stay an additional day.
During one activity, members attempt to win a tug-of-war against a rope that ascends into the night sky. Justin says it is held by a member on a ladder but cannot explain how he loses when everyone else is present. The brothers separately notice increasingly weird occurrences. While exploring the woods, Justin becomes convinced an invisible entity is observing him, and it leaves him a photograph of a buoy. When pressed for answers, Hal admits to Justin that he knows no more than anyone else. His equation is his interpretation of what is happening, and he encourages Justin to find his own answers by following the entity's clues, such as the buoy in the photograph. Two moons rise in the sky and Hal explains away the second moon as an atmospheric phenomenon, then says that two moons bring the truth, and three moons signify the ascension. Hal tells Justin to come to a conclusion before a third moon rises.
On a fishing trip with Aaron, Justin sees the buoy from the photograph and dives under it. He returns with a toolbox containing a tape and says something else is under the water. Disturbed by the strange events and hints of their meaning, Justin insists they leave immediately. At the camp, Hal and Justin get into an argument after Hal plays the tape, which is a recording of Justin and Aaron misrepresenting Camp Arcadia to outsiders. Justin calls Hal a cult leader, and Hal says Justin made up lurid stories to tell the press about Camp Arcadia. Outraged that Justin was misleading him, too, Aaron refuses to leave. Justin's car does not start, and he leaves to find help.
Justin encounters several people stuck in time loops, most of whom repeatedly experience violent deaths for the entity's amusement. They explain that Justin will also become trapped once the third moon rises. Justin finds Aaron, and on their way back to the camp, the brothers pass various monoliths and structures depicting the entity as interpreted by different cultures. Despite Justin's explanations, Aaron still prefers staying to returning to his old life. He reasons that death at the hands of the entity (considered a sacred ritual by the cult) is better than a life of menial jobs and no friends. When Justin admits he was wrong to force Aaron into this lifestyle, Aaron becomes hopeful that their life can improve and agrees to leave. The brothers barely escape as the entity appears to destroy the camp. The brothers drive away while the members of the cult seem wistful about their departure.
Cast
Production
The film was shot in Descanso, located in southeastern San Diego County.
Release
The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 21, 2017. On May 1, 2017, Well Go USA Entertainment acquired distribution rights to the film. The film was released on April 6, 2018, by Well Go USA Entertainment.
= Critical reception
=On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 92% based on 132 reviews and an average rating of 7.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "The Endless benefits from its grounded approach to an increasingly bizarre story, elevated by believable performances by filmmakers Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 80 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Matt Zoller Seitz of RogerEbert.com gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of four, stating, "If you have a good idea, a strong cast, a smart script, and directorial chops, you don't need a lot of money to make a compelling movie. The Endless is proof."
Horror novelist and podcaster Brian Keene praised the film on social media, tweeting "The Endless is a true horror masterpiece—a David Lynch meets Stuart Gordon meets Don Coscarelli fever dream of Lovecraftian cosmic horror that demands repeated viewings."
See also
List of films featuring time loops
List of media set in San Diego
References
External links
The Endless at IMDb
The Endless at Box Office Mojo
La Película Infinita (The Endless Film or The Infinite Film) is a 2018 Argentinian experimental documentary film directed by Leandro Listorti, his first feature-length work.
Summary
La Película Infinita is a film essay featuring an assemblage of never completed films from the 1950s onwards from archives of a Buenos Aires film museum (for which the director is also curator), presenting an alternate parallel history of film and tracing a national cinema that never was invoking the ghosts of the country's dictatorial past.
Films featured
The following films were featured in unfinished fragments:
Nicolás Sarquís’s failed 1984 adaptation of Zama (1984)
El eternauta (Hugo Gil; 1968)
La neutrónica explotó en Burzaco (Alejandro Agresti; 1984)
Sistema español (Martín Rejtman; 1988)
El ocio (Mariano Llinás and Agustín Mendilaharzu; 1999)
Release
It was released in Argentina on August 2, 2018 where it grossed $190.
Reception
A review compared this assemblage of films to the "Frankenstein's method". Another review found the film was failed and "mechanical". A more appreciative assessment can be found at Desistfilm: "It is likely that everything lost at some point can have a second life, from the words that were not said to the images that were not filmed, La Película Infinita is just a sample of that videolibrary of Babel that is hidden somewhere and where all the lost cinema is kept; and we need more Listortis and Bill Morrisons that know how to show them before our eyes."
See also
Film preservation
Lost film
Zama - a 2017 film directed by Lucrecia Martel
La Memoria Infinita
References
External links
Official website
Official trailer
IMDb
MUBI
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- The Endless Summer
- Endless Love (film 1981)
- Shana Feste
- DC Extended Universe
- Indahkus
- Film dalam tahun 1981
- Miley Cyrus
- Justin Benson
- Ryan Reynolds
- Brooke Shields
- The Endless (film)
- The Endless Film
- Endless Love (1981 film)
- Endless (2020 film)
- Endless Love (2014 American film)
- The Endless Summer
- Endless
- Endless Bummer (film)
- Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz
- Endless Poetry