Your Company
 

These Final Hours

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Australia · 2014
Rated R · 1h 27m
Director Zak Hilditch
Starring Nathan Phillips, Angourie Rice, Daniel Henshall, Jessica De Gouw
Genre Drama, Science Fiction, Thriller

What would you do on the last day on Earth? With the world's end only hours away, the self-absorbed James heads to the ultimate party-to-end-all-parties. On his way there, he saves the life of a girl named Rose, who is searching for her missing father. This simple act sets James on a path to redemption.

Stream These Final Hours

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

58

The A.V. Club by

Incoherent and pointless as it is, These Final Hours moves with commendable swiftness.

60

Village Voice by Danny King

Hilditch's approach to this end-of-days scenario can be heavy-handed... But Hilditch gets good mileage out of his cast.

70

Los Angeles Times by Gary Goldstein

Writer-director Zak Hilditch, with a strong assist from cinematographer Bonnie Elliott (who's bathed her frames in a kind of eerie sulfuric yellow), has crafted an urgent yet strangely simple and humanistic doomsday scenario.

80

Total Film by Jamie Graham

Sure, the core tale of personal redemption is standard stuff but Zak Hilditch’s breathless, batshit-crazy thriller tears through orgies, mass suicides and murderous rampages to conclude on a scene as moving and terrifying as the climax of Melancholia. Hold on tight.

80

Empire by Kim Newman

So many films address the premise because it’s always thought-provoking and affecting. This also has a bleached, depopulated, effectively catastrophe-struck feel and an intriguing adult-and-child road movie storyline.

50

RogerEbert.com by Peter Sobczynski

While it does have a few things of interest going for it, this low-budget effort ends up arriving at its necessarily predictable conclusion in too many unnecessarily predictable ways.

60

Time Out London by Tom Huddleston

It takes a while to find its focus – and takes itself just a little too seriously – but as low-budget Ozploitation goes, it’s snappy and effective.

Users who liked this film also liked