Living End

Director(s): Gregg Araki

Screenwriter(s): Gregg Araki

Executive Producers: Evelyn Hu, Jon Jost, Henry Rosenthal, Mike Thomas
Producers: Marcus Hu, Jon Gerrans
Coproducer: Jim Stark
Associate Producer: Andrea Sperling
Cinematographer/Editor: Gregg Araki
Lighting: Christopher Münch 

Living End
Collection

U.S.A.,  1992, 92 mins, color


Gregg Araki's The Living End, which debuted at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival, is a buddy movie gone bad; Luke (Mike Dytri) and Jon (Craig Gilmore) are literally on the road to nowhere. Luke is a rootless hustler who's determined to "live fast, die young, and make a beautiful corpse," while Jon is a freelance writer whose life and stability are devastated when he finds out he's HIV positive. They meet by chance (or is it fate?), and when Luke kills a cop, they take to the road. A casual affair leads to mutual dependence and a lasting bond. As Luke tells Jon, "Don't you get it? We're not like them. We don't have as much time, so we have to grab life by the balls and go for it."

Araki traps the characters close to the camera or isolates them against sterile or desolate landscapes, made luminous by Christopher Münch's surreal lighting. Most of the people they meet are alienated or hostile, which only deepens their isolation. The film's title encapsulates the paradox that becomes their lives.

Strand Releasing and Fortissimo Films have completely remastered the film for this screening, cleaning up the original 16mm print and transferring it to HD, recolor-timing it, and totally remixing the soundtrack. In giving a vibrant voice to the speechless and disenfranchised, The Living End makes a welcome addition to the Sundance Collection.
Gregg Araki - Gregg Araki earned an MFA in film production from USC's School of Cinematic Arts and a BA in film studies from UC Santa Barbara. His feature-film credits include Smiley Face, Mysterious Skin, Splendor, Nowhere, The Doom Generation, Totally F***ed Up, The Living End, The Long Weekend (o' Despair) and Three Bewildered People in the Night, most of which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Araki's films have screened at the world's most prestigious film festivals, including Sundance, Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Toronto, Deauville, London, and New York.
Screenings:

Fri. January 18, 8:30pm, Prospector Square Theatre, Park City
Sat. January 19, 4:30pm, Broadway Centre Cinemas VI, SLC
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