
Plot Summary
In an instant, millions disappear in what Christians call the Rapture. This leaves the planet in total chaos and unrest. The lives of four people are followed as they experience the fallout from this cataclysmic event. A rich football player in America wrestles with the fact that his wife has disappeared. An atheist professor finds himself stranded on a deserted island after his plane crashes. A girl from Argentina cannot remember what happened to her as she tries to piece the events of her life back together. A businessman from Tokyo wonders if his Christian friends were right about the end of the world. They will all have to struggle to survive in this new world.
Production Quality (-1 points)
It’s hard to remember the last time we saw a production this annoyingly horrible. For starters, the camera work and video quality are medieval, like the whole thing was recorded on a flip phone. The audio quality is perhaps the worst we have ever heard, from a loud soundtrack, to audio constantly cutting in and out, to distorted screeching dialogue, and to incessant background noises and cheap sound effects. The sets, locations, and props are very amateurish and cheap-looking. Finally, whoever edited this disaster should have quit to save their reputation since they had virtually nothing to work with. The film is very choppy and jumps all over the place, sometimes recycled old footage and sometimes using black and white footage randomly. The viewer is constantly reminded of the location and time through subtitles since there is no other way to understand what’s going on. In short, this is likely one of the worst productions in the all-time history of film making.
Plot and Storyline Quality (0 points)
The plot can do nothing to redeem this trainwreck, since there is very little real content to speak of. Filled with obvious dialogue and stiff, robotic characters, the storyline has zero continuity as random subplots jump all over the place and meander aimlessly. The characters are either obnoxious strawmen or cultural stereotypes. There are many bizarre asides, moments of unintentional comedy, and random things that just happen. Also, as expected, Final copies the typical apocalyptic plot progression but makes it their own by zooming through it at breakneck speed before crashing with a nonsensical end that is somehow supposed to be continued. In other words, this is Left Behind 2014 on steroids (or is it actually the other way around?).
Acting Quality (-1 points)
As these amateur cast members screech, squeal, and scream their way through this disarray, they either come off as lackluster or singsong. They are generally very obnoxious and over the top, obviously lacking coaching as they forcefully deliver their lines and emotions. We are unsure who is to blame for their ear-piercing delivery—the audio quality or the cast members themselves. Any way you cut it, it’s a mess.
Conclusion
With such low quality everything, what possessed the creators to make this garbage? Did they really think that they were going to make more of these, as this is presumably the first in an obligatory unfinished apocalyptic series? This is hands-down one of the most absurdly low quality films of all time, to the point that it should have been made it through post-production. The entirety of this wreckage should have been scrapped and never used again. It’s things like this film that drive us crazy.
Final Rating: -2 out of 10 points