The Night Eats the World

3.00
    The Night Eats the World
    2018

    Synopsis

    After waking up to find himself all alone in an apartment where a massive party was being held the night before, Sam is immediately forced to face a terrifying reality: the living dead have invaded the streets of Paris.

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    Cast

    • Anders Danielsen LieSam
    • Golshifteh FarahaniSarah
    • Denis LavantAlfred
    • Sigrid BouazizFanny
    • David KammenosMathieu
    • Jean-Yves CyllyNeighbor Father
    • Nancy MurilloNeighbor Mother
    • Lina-Rose DjedjeNeighbor Daughter
    • Victor van der WoerdZombie Neighbor
    • Léo PouletZombie Father

    Recommendations

    • 83

      IndieWire

      Even as the story drifts off, Night Eats the World derives its power from a beguiling, provocative implication: It’s hard to confront a hostile world, but gathering the courage to do so doesn’t make the job any easier.
    • 67

      The A.V. Club

      In the end, though, it’s the very concepts that make The Night Eats The World sound insufferably pretentious on paper — namely, its high-minded ideas and emphasis on small moments — that tip the film toward intriguing rather than, well, zombifying.
    • 67

      The Film Stage

      The Night Eats the World gazes upon what’s left of society through a lens of pragmatism. It acknowledges that humanity is barely beating back its own extinction, that survivors are the minority and therefore minutes from oblivion if they cannot adapt.
    • 63

      Slant Magazine

      Dominique Rocher reinvigorates the zombie film only to succumb to the strictures of the coming-of-age romance.
    • 60

      Village Voice

      Unfortunately, the best and worst thing about director Dominique Rocher and his two co-writers’ scenario is its familiarity.
    • 50

      Movie Nation

      While the setting is striking, a Paris “28 Days Later/Rammbock/I Am Legend” dark and silent after the end of civilization, genre fans may find this passive narrative slow and largely devoid of action, despite the odd burst of menace. Because it is. Slow.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The problem is that The Night Eats the World steers so far into the quotidian of its hero that it can become quite frustrating, and even rather dull, to sit through. The threat of death doesn't become as tangible as it should, and the suspense wears itself too thin.
    • 40

      Variety

      The very definition of a well-made movie that nonetheless really needn’t have been made at all, Rocher’s entry into the canon will attract a few zombie completists, but provide little fun for the average genre buff and underwhelming reward for art-house audiences.

    Seen by

    • MARTIN