Rapture-Palooza
Left behind after the Rapture, a young woman (Anna Kendrick) and her boyfriend (John Francis Daley) battle their way through a religious apocalypse on a mission to prevent the Antichrist (Craig Robinson) from taking her as his unholy bride.
28 January 1991, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
29 April 1978, Brampton, Ontario, Canada
9 August 1970, Chicago, Illinois, USA
20 July 1985, Wheeling, Illinois, USA
4 May 1967, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
4 June 1969, Columbia, South Carolina, USA
9 August 1985, Portland, Maine, USA
12 February 1963, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
July 15, 2015
Robinson's grating performance becomes increasingly difficult to stomach...
June 16, 2013
For a film about the apocalypse, Matheson's script felt a little bit too bland and mundane. Who would have thought the rapture could be so boring?
June 07, 2013
It never does live up to its potential, instead becoming bogged down in a repellent character who is supposed to be savagely satirical but is really just tediously crass.
June 12, 2013
Rapture-Palooza is a film worth sticking though as the third act goes for broke and delivers many of the story's biggest laughs, ending far stronger than it started.
June 06, 2013
Matheson's script focuses its energy on small, wickedly funny gags, half of which Robinson seems to have sputtered out as improv.
June 07, 2013
[An] almost endearingly silly amuse bouche of a comedy depicting how the End of Days might play out in Seattle ...
June 04, 2013
Should please those who own Shaun of the Dead on Blu-ray, and can quote one-liners from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (the novel, not the film).
June 06, 2013
The laughs are consistent and the cast (including Rob Corddry, Paul Scheer and Ken Jeong as a very petty God) is a riot.
August 21, 2013
Rapture-Palooza is borderline-heartbreaking in its wasted potential.
June 11, 2013
Judgment day comedy is low on laughs, high on raunchy jokes.
June 07, 2013
An amusing premise yields few yuks.
June 14, 2013
In a post-South Park world, lazy execution of a ribald, potentially controversial concept will not suffice -- especially not when the apocalypse is being handled with much more wit, vim and verve just across the megaplex.

