Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows

End of the Century

Play trailer Poster for End of the Century Released Aug 16, 2019 1h 24m Drama Romance Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
92% Tomatometer 49 Reviews 74% Popcornmeter 50+ Ratings
A 30-something Argentine poet on vacation in Barcelona begins a budding romance with a Spaniard from Berlin.
Watch on Fandango at Home Buy Now

Where to Watch

End of the Century

End of the Century

What to Know

Critics Consensus

Understated yet impactful, End of the Century offers viewers a powerful love story, elegantly told.

Read Critics Reviews

Critics Reviews

View All (49) Critics Reviews
Hanna Flint Time Out Like 'Sliding Doors' with added subtlety and soul, this swooning love story spins the idea of 'what if?' into something deeply romantic. Rated: 4/5 Mar 19, 2020 Full Review Tim Robey Daily Telegraph (UK) The film is like finding one of Proust's madeleines tucked inside a short story by Borges, where it keeps vanishing and reappearing. Rated: 5/5 Feb 20, 2020 Full Review Peter Bradshaw Guardian It balances what is with what might have been and what could still be, and, although the result is maybe a bit less substantial than Castro intended, there is a certain literary elegance in the way he sketches it out. Rated: 3/5 Feb 20, 2020 Full Review Brian T. Carney Washington Blade With bold and exciting artistic choices, first-time director Lucio Castro creates a steamy mystery about two men who meet on the streets of Barcelona. Dec 7, 2022 Full Review Cris Kennedy The Canberra Times (Australia) Castro asks some hard questions for the audience to ponder about those brief moments that could have become real things, real relationships, had we the maturity to allow it for ourselves. Rated: 4/5 Aug 17, 2022 Full Review Jason Adams My New Plaid Pants It is the lemniscate toppled over, the infinite seen sideways -- the top and the bottom, here in all its explicit double entendre, reciprocated Jan 14, 2022 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (10) audience reviews
PridePosterStudios Surely I’m not the only one who had no idea when flashbacks were happening and when they weren’t. Vapid, and felt like it was a century long. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 06/14/24 Full Review Audience Member Mind blowing, one of the best movies I have ever seen 🤯🍾 Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/29/23 Full Review Apollo M The story is quite confusing. But other than that, if I got the story right, it is quite alright. The acting and directing are great. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 10/08/20 Full Review Audience Member Hum, what is happening with the timeline?! Spoilers : one of them says they've already met before then the films "goes back" in time without any sort of warning. Then it comes back to the present, only to go to some alternate reality for a short while (without any notice, again!!) before coming back to the present again. That aside, the film is alright. The characters are likeable and sweet. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/23/23 Full Review Audience Member It was somewhat obscure but overall good rhythm and acting. Having goat cheese, bread and white wine by the Barcelona sunset reflected the sensuality and simplicity of this pleasant movie. Perfect pastime even when you suspect you don't follow the script completely. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/21/23 Full Review Audience Member Lucio Castro's film begins in a rather mundane and wordless manner as we see Juan Barberini's Ocho arrives at his Barcelona Airbnb. He wanders around the city, cruise on Grindr and goes to the beach. That's when he sees Ramon Pujol's Javi again and eventually they hook up. So far, so conventional queer cinema. However, Castro then throws us a curveball (and not for the only time in this film) just before the end of the first act and it jumps back 20 years earlier. The set-up is typical of gay romantic drama of this ilk but the writer-director has remodelled it and gives it a shiny and original sheen. What I thought the film was initially turns out, happily, to be quite different from what it eventually becomes: a queer Before Sunrise sliced with the DNA of Sliding Doors that takes a melancholic look at love, hope and missed opportunities and how we change as the world around us, and also in this instance gay life, have changed in the intervening two decades. Filmed with often stationary long takes, Castro develops a style that seems appropriate to the material as if we become silent observers soaking up the intimacy of either a conversation over cheese and wine or a sizzling encounter between two hot guys. There are moments when the film veers on the pretentious side and despite the director's justification during the Q&A afterwards that it was a deliberate decision to keep the same actors and the same look for the characters as they play both their younger and the older selves, I find it a little confusing at first and unnecessarily distracting. Those small quibbles aside, I've nevertheless enjoyed this contemplative and enigmatic film that refreshingly reshapes familiar elements into something appealing and rather romantic.
 Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Read all reviews
End of the Century

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW
2 Hearts 17% 87% 2 Hearts Watchlist TRAILER for 2 Hearts See You Soon 40% 73% See You Soon Watchlist TRAILER for See You Soon A Moment in the Reeds 92% 68% A Moment in the Reeds Watchlist Lost Girls & Love Hotels 50% 35% Lost Girls & Love Hotels Watchlist TRAILER for Lost Girls & Love Hotels Angelfish 83% 86% Angelfish Watchlist Discover more movies and 온라인카지노추천 shows. View More

Movie Info

Synopsis A 30-something Argentine poet on vacation in Barcelona begins a budding romance with a Spaniard from Berlin.
Director
Lucio Castro
Screenwriter
Lucio Castro
Distributor
The Cinema Guild
Production Co
Doco Digital
Genre
Drama, Romance
Original Language
Spanish
Release Date (Theaters)
Aug 16, 2019, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Feb 12, 2020
Box Office (Gross USA)
$62.1K
Runtime
1h 24m
Most Popular at Home Now