"Till The World Ends" est l'histoire de deux jeunes qui se retrouvent accidentellement à vivre ensemble au cours des 13 derniers jours avant la fin du monde. Art, un séduisant étudiant en commerce qui a perdu la mémoire dans un accident, veut retourner dans sa ville natale pour retrouver sa véritable identité. Cependant, au moment de son accident, le gouvernement annonce la fin imminente du monde et ordonne l'évacuation de la population vers les bunkers, tandis que le chaos et la panique massive se propagent. Art, en cette période de désastre, compte sur un nouvel ami pour l'aider à naviguer et à se préparer à la fin. Golf est un étudiant en médecine avec une histoire familiale et relationnelle tumultueuse, ayant envoyé son frère en prison, le laissant complètement seul. Il ne s'est jamais senti vraiment aimé et ne veut rien de plus qu'une chance d'avoir ce « véritable amour » avant de mourir. Il choisit de rejoindre Art dans sa recherche de lui-même, motivé en partie par son implication dans son accident. Alors que le chaos s'étend, les deux se retrouvent poursuivis par deux hommes qui se sont donné pour mission de tuer autant de personnes que possible à l'extérieur du bunker avant son extinction. Grâce à cela et aux problèmes qu’ils traversent, ils nouent un lien et sont obligés de gérer leurs sentiments confus les uns envers les autres avec le peu de temps qui leur reste. Parce qu’ils savent qu’ils finiront par mourir. (Source: MyDramaList) Modifier la traduction
- Français
- English
- हिन्दी
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- Titre original: รักกันวันโลกแตก
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: Till the World Ends the Series
- Scénariste et Réalisateur: Aam Anusorn Soisa-ngim
- Genres: Thriller, Romance, SF
Où regarder Till the World Ends
Distribution et équipes
- Art Pakpoom Juanchainat Rôle principal
- Best Anavil Charttong Rôle principal
- Michael Kiettisak ScofieldGusRôle principal
- Knight Pichayuth RajitjameekornLongRôle principal
- Songklod Kunlachat CheythongJokeRôle principal
- Suporn SangkaphibalA MaRôle Secondaire
Critiques
It's good, but...
Given the limited budget, this is extremely well-made, with obvious passion invested by everyone involved, which I've come to expect from this group. The cinematography and directing are wonderful with fantastic performances pulled out of talented actors, the music selections ar great, and the German subtitles are first rate, so I hear.It's great to see Art Pakpoom in a leading role again, and Michael Kiettisak puts in another top-tier performance - he may be the most underrated actor in BL - I'm still haunted by his horrifying abuse victim in Call It What You Want.
The story, however, prevents these ingredients from reaching their full potential. It perhaps tries to do too much - social commentary, messaging about how short life is, wanting to be a '90s Gregg Araki film, horror, adventure, romance, comedy...
So while I appreciate how well-done this is, the big question is, did I enjoy watching it? Not really. It's very violent, it's a bit all-over-the-place as a genre, and commentary about the corruption in society and the human condition are either extremely unsubtle (like who gets to go to the bunker - that was hammer-over-the-head commentary), or undermined by the contrasting trio of antagonists. Because the villains were all psychopaths, they contributed no meaning. If we're looking at different choices in how to spend the last two weeks of your life, basically good people versus people who want to violently murder as many people as possible before they die says nothing. There is nothing about them identify with, you can have no sympathy for them, they have no point to make, they're just evil and must be destroyed.
Why not have people who are so greedy that they steal and accumulate wealth, or so desire power that they try to rule everyone else? Or even if they had wanted to have sex with as many people as possible before the worlds ends, that would be relatable, for sure if everyone looks like the cast.
So as a result, the series gets bogged down in with a large amount of screentime being chewed up by horrible people who have nothing to do but have surprisingly graphic and sweaty sex (probably the most realistic sex scene ever in a BL) and kill people, which they do, a lot (unfortunately the killing, not the sex).
In addition, instead of examining how impending doom might affect the course of romance, the main pair fall into a depressingly conventional seme-uke pattern, where Art acts like a Victorian twelve-year-old, when even a Victorian twelve-year-old would throw up her hands, say 'f$%& propriety', and want to bang Golf and his brother 24/7 if the world were ending. But Art acts like a kiss on the cheek in a completely abandoned world is scandalous. Art has no agency and is helpless and useless, requiring Golf to do everything for him.
Everything is too predictable, and you end up stressed out knowing characters you don't want to die are going to die, stupid decisions to be made are telegraphed - decisions that are inexplicably out of character, which is lazy writing.
And to get it out of the way, there was an incredible amount of criticism of the faulty astrophysics - if the moon were on a collision course with the Earth, the Earth's gravity would break it up, and there would be horrendous natural disasters, so this is too unrealistic. THAT'S the line you're going to draw in the sand? There are BLs where one of the main pair is dead, or a vampire, nobody sweats after running a mile through Bangkok in the afteroon while wearing a wool suit, every male student at the school is gay and rich, you can turn a straight guy gay if you trip and have him catch you - but not having earthquakes and tsunamis in a project that likely had a 5-figure budget is unacceptable? Anyway, the moon crashing into the earth is symbolic and metaphorical - it doesn't need to be realistic.
So do I recommend this? Yes, unless you don't like gore. All the positives I mentioned at the top make it worth your time - this isn't a rehashed plot, it's not full of tropes and cliches, and you get to watch very attractive people who can both act and look great with their shirts off. If that seemed like a lot of criticism, it's because I think this could have been one of the best BLs of all time instead of merely good. While the characters are largely more appealing, this doesn't quite have the polished genius of Call It What You Want.

Diamond in the Rough
I rarely write reviews for the shows I watch but I was so impressed with the series that I had to. I did not go into this expecting much. I though its a low budget, standard Thai BL that will hopefully be middle of the road at best and to cringey to finish at worst. I was absolutely wrong.This was amazing! The acting, the script, the pacing....all of it were spot on. I laughed, I cried, I screamed out loud, I cheered and sometimes all in the same episode. Will this be a show for everyone,...absolutely not. It does have some really heavy violence but it does fit within the story.
I highly recommend this series but maybe watch with friends to share the emotional roller coaster.