The Day the World Ended

The Day the World Ended is a 2001 American science fiction/horror television film and is the fourth in the Creature Features series broadcast on Cinemax. It stars Nastassja Kinski, Randy Quaid, and Bobby Edner.

The Day the World Ended
DVD cover
Screenplay byMax Enscoe
Annie deYoung
Story byBrian King
Directed byTerence Gross
StarringNastassja Kinski
Randy Quaid
Bobby Edner
Theme music composerCharles Bernstein
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Lou Arkoff
Colleen Camp
Stan Winston
CinematographyMark Vargo
Editor(s)Stephen Mark
Running time91 minutes
Production company(s)Creature Features Productions
DistributorColumbia TriStar Television
Release
Original networkCinemax
Original release
  • November 23, 2001 (2001-11-23)

While not being a direct remake of the 1955 film with a similar title (Day the World Ended), it utilizes the original film by showing segments on a TV seen within the story and showing that the VHS video box cover as part of the child's interest in aliens. Some scenes were filmed in Wrightwood, California.

Plot

This film finds an alien, who is misunderstood, bent on hunting down and devouring people. A school psychologist, Dr Jennifer Stillman (Nastassja Kinski) investigates the death of a student's mother and finds that the boy (Bobby Edner) believes he is the son of the being. His earthling father (Randy Quaid) is also a doctor, who has the boy in his care and holds that it is all in the boy's imagination.

Cast

Release

The film was released on Cinemax on November 23, 2001.

Reception

One review said, "It may be far from what Nastassja Kinski is capable of, but DAY THE WORLD ENDED is a fine film in its own right. Genuinely creepy and a real find for people who can't decide between psychological terror and popcorn-munching exploitation."[1]

gollark: Haskell could save you from having to write Java.
gollark: Then it mutated into all these variants.
gollark: Then that got dropped for easier transmission at some point.
gollark: As hard as it is to track down the original version of memes, the first one was a video of some kind with them reading it out I think?
gollark: I think so.

References

  1. Davis, Scott. "The Day the World Ended". Horror Express. Retrieved 19 June 2020.


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