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DramaScience FictionAdventure

Until the End of the World

- . . . the ultimate road movie

In 1999, a woman's life is forever changed after she survives a car crash with two bank robbers, who enlist her help to take the money to a drop in Paris. On the way, she runs into another fugitive from the law — an American doctor on the run from the CIA. They want to confiscate his father's invention – a device which allows anyone to record their dreams and visions.

Release Date : 1991-09-12

Language :EnglishFrenchGermanItalianJapanese

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Wim Wenders StiftungArgos FilmsVillage Roadshow EntertainmentRoad MoviesWarner Bros. Pictures

Production Country : AustraliaFranceGermany

Alternative Titles :

Cast

William Hurt

Character Name : Sam Farber, alias Trevor McPhee

Original Name : William Hurt

Gender : Male

Solveig Dommartin

Character Name : Claire Tourneur

Original Name : Solveig Dommartin

Gender : Female

Sam Neill

Character Name : Eugene Fitzpatrick

Original Name : Sam Neill

Gender : Male

Max von Sydow

Character Name : Henry Farber

Original Name : Max von Sydow

Gender : Male

Rüdiger Vogler

Character Name : Phillip Winter

Original Name : Rüdiger Vogler

Gender : Male

Ernie Dingo

Character Name : Burt

Original Name : Ernie Dingo

Gender : Male

Jeanne Moreau

Character Name : Edith Farber

Original Name : Jeanne Moreau

Gender : Female

Chick Ortega

Character Name : Chico Remy

Original Name : Chick Ortega

Gender : Male

Elena Prudnikova

Character Name : Krasikova

Original Name : Елена Прудникова

Gender : Female

Eddy Mitchell

Character Name : Raymond Monnet

Original Name : Eddy Mitchell

Gender : Male

Chishū Ryū

Character Name : Mr. Mori

Original Name : 笠智衆

Gender : Male

Allen Garfield

Character Name : Bernie, Used Car Dealer

Original Name : Allen Garfield

Gender : Male

Lois Chiles

Character Name : Elsa Farber

Original Name : Lois Chiles

Gender : Female

Ernest Berk

Character Name : Anton Farber

Original Name : Ernest Berk

Gender : Male

Christine Oesterlein

Character Name : Irina Farber

Original Name : Christine Oesterlein

Gender : Female

Naoto Takenaka

Character Name : Custodian

Original Name : 竹中直人

Gender : Male

Kuniko Miyake

Character Name : Mrs. Mori

Original Name : 三宅邦子

Gender : Female

Alfred Lynch

Character Name : Old Man Alfred

Original Name : Alfred Lynch

Gender : Male

David Gulpilil

Character Name : David

Original Name : David Gulpilil

Gender : Male

Jimmy Little

Character Name : Peter

Original Name : Jimmy Little

Gender : Male

Justine Saunders

Character Name : Maisie

Original Name : Justine Saunders

Gender : Female

Tom Farrell

Character Name : Man in Bar

Original Name : Tom Farrell

Gender : Male

Tom Waits

Character Name : Singer in Bar

Original Name : Tom Waits

Gender : Male

Adelle Lutz

Character Name : Makiko

Original Name : Adelle Lutz

Gender : Female

Reviews

F

Filipe Manuel Neto

@FilipeManuelNeto

2024-03-15

**A Pharaonic work that went terribly wrong.** Have you ever tried to do something extremely complicated and ambitious and failed because of the enormity of what you were trying to do? I bet that even those to whom this has never happened will be able to name some examples: Pharaonic public works that went wrong or never came to fruition in full, private projects and companies that failed because of their own mistakes. There will be no shortage of examples, and I think we can add this film to that list, since the main flaw stems from the ambitions of its creator. Wim Wenders is one of the great German directors of our time and no one can deny him this merit, not even those who don't really appreciate his style, or who criticize him (with some propriety) for having transformed, in recent years, into that kind of director that he criticized at the beginning of his career. However, what he wanted to do in this film was a task far beyond his capabilities and ingenuity. An epic lasting more than twenty hours that was condensed into a summary of three and a half hours and, years later, partially restored in the form of the “director's version”, lasting almost six hours. I made the mistake of trying to see precisely the latter, believing that I was seeing the version closest to the creator's vision. However, what he gives us is so uninteresting and so confusing that I wasted my time. The story begins with the threat of an Indian nuclear satellite, which will crash to earth, and then introduces Claire, a young woman who seems to be looking for a direction in her life in the midst of a futile existence. After a car accident in which she meets two bank robbers, she agrees to take the stolen money to Paris, in exchange for a percentage. In the midst of this, she helps a mysterious man who appears to be fleeing from a murderer and who steals some of her money. Committed to recovering him, she follows him around the world and ends up hiring a private detective. As I believe you can already understand from this summary, the plot is not devoid of good ideas and had potential. With the characters always on the move, traveling the world, the film is not monotonous and has some potential for light comedy (although Wenders' humor is completely German, and we know what that means). However, the film gets lost in constant twists and turns that go nowhere. Circulating from one country to another, the plot wastes hours of our lives in a story without substance or content. Wenders doesn't spare us and gives us long scenes where the characters drive cars, walk or make phone calls. He looks like a five-year-old kid who starts telling his parents the most complicated story just to ask for a toy he saw in a store. This is what ruins the film and makes it unbearable. Oh, and of course, the issue of the falling satellite ends up completely forgotten in all this. The production values are quite good considering it's a European film and the millions from the Hollywood machine are absent from the equation. Wenders managed to create some somewhat futuristic elements such as public telephones with video calling or police motorcycles with a bold and bizarre appearance. The urban settings seem hostile, with all sorts of trash and graffiti. The cinematography is magnificent, and the director makes the most of it, as is usual in the films he makes, but on the other hand, the soundtrack is virtually inaudible and does not add any quality to the final work. Solveig Dammartin was a good choice for the main character. She is elegant, and gives her character a special charm throughout the film. Unfortunately, she can't do miracles with the material given to her. Sam Neill also makes the most of the occasion in the best way he can, but the film is far from being one of the best of his career, and the same can be said of William Hurt. Both are committed, and the work of this trio of actors ends up being the most redeeming value that the film has to present to us. Unfortunately, they are stuck with the incoming material, which completely kills their efforts.