REVIEW: I really wanted to like JOHN DIES AT THE END. I’ve heard great things about the book by David Wong, I liked Don Coscarelli’s BUBBA HO-TEP (not to mention PHANTASM and THE BEASTMASTER), and having Paul Giamatti in the cast was the icing on the cake. I went into the all-press screening of this last night with high hopes, and sure enough, for the first part of the movie, I thought I was watching a future cult classic.
Like I said, the first part of JOHN DIES AT THE END is fun, but the novelty wears off quick, and by the the time the complicated flashback structure starts to become apparent, leading to an origin tale that’s more than a little boring, JOHN DIES started to lose me.
It’s also worth mentioning that the CGI in JOHN DIES is bad enough that they seem lifted from the cut scenes of a bad nineties video game or XENA: WARRIOR PRINCES, although I’m aware the budget was ridiculously low. Perhaps the dimension spanning story was a little too ambitious for such a cheap film, and it gets to the point that the visuals start to look ridiculous, with the green screen work being exceptionally bad. Perhaps the cheap FX are supposed to be quaint, and add to the charm of the film, but to me they just looked cheap.
Suffice to say, other than Williamson, and the dog, there’s not much here that really makes JOHN DIES AT THE END worth watching, unless you happen to catch it on Netflix Instant or something. Still, to play devil’s advocate, a lot of other folks present at the screening seemed to enjoy JOHN DIES, so I dunno, maybe it just didn’t work for me. It needed more of a polish, and it certainly needed higher production values to make this the type of film I’d think was worth seeing. Compared to the many other films I’ve seen this year that were done with even lower budgets than JOHN DIES, the low-rent vibe of the movie is really disappointing. Skip it, unless you’re a Coscarelli devotee.