A man wakes up in his house in New Zealand, wanders out and finds no sign of life anywhere, just the entire city like the Marie Celeste, with nothing but half-finished meals and empty cars, and only white noise on the TV, radio or at the end of the phone. Unsurprisingly, he concludes that's he's the only person left in the world and has a spree for a while, fairly much the usual kind seen in post-apocalyptic films, so moving into a posh house, going on a consumerist rampage through shops, drinking champagne for breakfast and so on. Where this does diverge from the genre norm is that he then also declares himself ruler of the world, addressing imaginary adoring multitudes from a balcony, and rails against religion, defying God to show himself.
Of course this alone can't sustain the running length, so two other living people are introduced, a man and a woman, leading to tensions between all of them in a deliberate evocation of Sartre's vision of hell. Then there's a quasi-scientific layer, as the first character, whowas involved in the experiment that caused the extinction-level event, seeks to rectify the situation.
A shoestring budget like this one for a sci-fi film is utterly dependent on a big idea, and it does its best to work with what it has, but does falter in the end due to not having a clear plan, taking the escape route of the open end without any resolution. Still, if only its modern Hollywood counterparts with megabudgets would try even half as hard.
6/10






