The Living End

    The Living End
    1992

    Synopsis

    Two HIV-positive young men — a semi-employed film critic and a hot hustler — tear off on a cross-country crime spree.

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    Cast

    • Mike DytriLuke
    • Craig GilmoreJon
    • Mark FinchDoctor
    • Mary WoronovDaisy
    • Johanna WentFern
    • Darcy MartaDarcy
    • Scott GoetzPeter
    • Brett VailKen
    • Nicole DillenbergBarbie
    • Stephen Holman7-11 Couple

    Recommendations

    • 100

      San Francisco Chronicle

      You can view the film narrowly as commentary on the soul-crushing fury of being HIV positive, or take a few steps back and see Araki's film in a more universal sense as the disintegration of human values caused by an obsessive culturewide drive for self-satisfaction and indifference to others. The Living End is much more than a time capsule, thanks to Araki's daring as a filmmaker.
    • 78

      Austin Chronicle

      Emotionally urgent, The Living End excites you about the state of independent filmmaking; it's a road movie that leaves a skid mark on the psyche.
    • 75

      Rolling Stone

      Araki gives his hypnotic film a raw intensity heightened by a surreal landscape and a jagged score from the likes of Braindead Sound Machine, KMFDM and Coil.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Doing himself a great disservice, the writer and director Gregg Araki labels his work "an irresponsible movie" when in fact it has the power of honesty and originality, as well as the weight of legitimate frustration. Miraculously, it also has a buoyant, mischievous spirit that transcends any hint of gloom.
    • 70

      Time Out

      Araki used to make fumbling anti-dramas about the flotsam of Los Angeles: depressed, ambivalent, uncommitted. This is really different. It's a queer 'couple-on-the-lam' movie, crammed with genre memories but closer to a bent Pierrot le Fou than to anything out of Hollywood.
    • 60

      Variety

      As a portrait of late-millennial nihilism, The Living End rejects the sympathetic bent of every afflicted-by-AIDS portrayal before or since.
    • 50

      TV Guide Magazine

      More admirable as a sheer technical feat of filmmaking than as a sustained dramatic narrative. It still makes worthwhile viewing.
    • 50

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The movie gives people a piece of the AIDS nightmare - a view of HIV-infected men struggling to retain romance - but the piece is sharp and brittle, with little humor truly working. And despite the somewhat serene ending, it is really shot through more with the characters' rage than anything. [14 Aug 1992, p.42]

    Loved by

    • EvguénieShonagon