Steve Carell and Keira Knightley, together as a couple who've fallen suddenly
and madly in love? Surely the apocalypse is nigh.
It's coming in three weeks, to be exact, in "Seeking a Friend for the End of the World," the feature
directing debut from screenwriter Lorene Scafaria ("Nick & Norah's Infinite
Playlist").
An asteroid 70 miles (113 kilometers) wide is hurtling toward Earth, ensuring
destruction and doom for the entire planet. Scafaria explores how people behave
when the rules of polite society are stripped away, a premise that isn't exactly
novel — the world ended just last year, much more artfully, in Lars Von Trier's
"Melancholia" — but one that's brimming with potential for absurdist, satirical
comedy.
Within that setting, Carell and Knightley get thrown together. The pairing
doesn't make a whole lot of sense on paper — in the real world or on the big
screen — but for the most part they have enough unexpected, opposites-attract
likability and find themselves in enough strangely amusing situations to make
the movie work. The mawkish third act, however, nearly destroys all that
appeal.
Carell's character, Dodge, is very much in the vein of the detached and
depressed but wryly observant figures he's played before: He's an insurance
agent whose wife takes off when news of the asteroid breaks. Knightley is his
downstairs neighbor in the apartment building, Penny, a free-spirited,
pot-smoking Brit with a penchant for classic vinyl records. She is your
quintessential Manic Pixie Dream Girl.
Naturally, these two people need to go on a road trip.
All Dodge wants to do is track down his high school sweetheart, The One That
Got Away, in hopes of rekindling the romance in his final days. (Clearly, she's
meant to represent everything he wanted out of life and never achieved.) Penny,
meanwhile, is fresh off a bad break-up (from a ridiculously self-centered
musician played by Adam Brody) and all she wants to do is get home to England to
ride it out with her family. Dodge knows a guy with a plane who can help
her.
Their journey (Scafaria also wrote the script) is buoyed by individual
moments, and by some of the inspired casting that's revealed at each stop along
the way. Among the best scenes takes place at the beginning: an end-of-the-world
party Dodge's friend Warren (Rob Corddry) and his wife (Connie Britton) throw,
where civilized, middle-aged people cavort in wild ways because ... why not?
Nothing matters anymore. Similarly, Dodge and Penny find themselves at a TGI
Friday's-style restaurant called Friendsy's where everyone has clearly been
doing Ecstasy and the possibility of indulgence and danger lurks in every fake
Tiffany-lamped corner.
But enjoyably odd moments like these give way to sentimentality by the end,
as if Scafaria didn't feel comfortable just letting her characters succumb to
the inevitable. No, they have to "learn something." They have to find catharsis
and redemption. They have to tidy things up before the end — and the film's
ending itself feels too tidy, as well.
The mess would have been more interesting — and more real.
"Seeking a Friend for the End of the World," a Focus Features release, is
rated R for language including some sexual references, some drug use and brief
violence. Running time: 101 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.