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Patricia (Barbara Bleier) and Henry (Liam Mitchell) have been married
for quite some decades now, and have withered storms, like him being
responsible for the accident that ended her dancing career, and her being
a bit too close to their mutual friend Julian (Austin Pendleton) - and to
be quite clear, these two things are not related - so it seems nothing
could shatter their relationship. And then some terrorists atom-bomb LA
(Patricia and Henry live on the East Coast, thus are safe for now), and
the US is a bit too quick to retaliate rather than try to let reason take
the driver's seat - and suddenly, the one thing nobody wanted, a nuclear
war, is inevitable - and while all residents in their area are urged to
evacuate, Patricia insists on staying, against not only his will but also
the will of their grown up "adopted" son (David Johnson) - and
it soon becomes clear, in a situation like this it's hard to figure out
what's the right and the wrong, the best and the worst thing to do from
the get-go ... Now Sunset's a mighty interesting film
for sure: Based on what I would term a worst case scenario this is by no
means a spectacle movie, nor a piece of speculative fiction in the broader
sense (in the more narrow sense, all fiction is speculative of course),
but it's a very humane movie about very basic things, like love, home,
giving up, marching on, told in a very engaging way, centered on two
characters who might not be the most likely movie heroes but who get the
notion across thanks to great writing and great performances (same goes
for the rest of the cast). Sure, some might be scared off by the
deliberate slow pace of the thing or the lack of actual on-screen action -
but those who can see beyond that will be richly rewarded.
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