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    Alien end times

    Shaun of the Dead team tackle extraterrestrial invaders in The World's End

    Joe Leydon
    Aug 21, 2013 | 3:47 pm

    After playing fast and loose with the conventions of zombie thrillers in Shaun of the Dead, and then transporting the tropes of supercop action flicks to a quiet English hamlet in Hot Fuzz, director Edgar Wright and actors Simon Pegg and Nick Frost have reteamed to tweak apocalyptic tales of extraterrestrial invasions in The World’s End, the grand finale of what this creative triumvirate describes as their “Cornetto Trilogy.”

    But be forewarned: There’s more to their new movie – much more, as a matter of fact – than what’s being hyped in the wild and wacky trailers and TV spots.

    Indeed, for the first half-hour, World’s End comes off as a melancholy comedy about not-so-quiet desperation.

    Having reached the dawn of middle age without ever quite growing up, Gary King (Pegg) is eager to return to his glory days as self-appointed ringleader for “the five musketeers,” a group of friends in the suburban U.K. town of Newton Haven. Trouble is, his four erstwhile buddies – now relatively secure and passably happy with jobs, spouses and other attributes of adulthood after moving far away from Newton Haven – don’t recall those long-ago school days as glorious in any way.

    And they’re far short of enthused when Gary invites them to return to their hometown and take another crack at the epic pub crawl that they began, yet failed to complete, one fateful night decades ago.

    But Gary is unrelenting in his any-means-necessary campaign to convince his former schoolmates – even Andy (Frost), the most reluctant of the lot – to join him on a quest to complete “The Golden Mile” by sampling a pint or two of beer at each of 12 pubs scattered about Newton Haven. Right from the start, however, Gary’s party-hearty exuberance is tempered by wet-blanket realities. For openers, Andy doesn’t drink pints of anything but water these days. And the other “musketeers” are only slightly more indulgent when it comes to sharing Gary’s frantic enthusiasm.

    But here’s the real drag: The old pubs don’t look quite the same, and the people who run them seem underwhelmed by Gary’s return. And it doesn’t help matters much that, the drunker Gary gets, the more his four friends remember why they haven’t kept up with the guy. After 30 minutes or so, the reunion appears ready to degenerate into barely polite tedium or, worse, angry recrimination.

    It’s only then that Gary realizes that most of the folks in Newton Haven have been replaced by extraterrestrial invaders. And they don’t approve of his misbehavior, either.

    Pegg, of course, is no stranger to acting opposite alien life forms. After all, he played Scotty in the last two Star Trek movies, co-wrote (with Nick Frost) and co-starred in the 2011 sci-fi comedy Paul, and even guest-starred in a classic episode of Dr. Who. But much like director Edgar Wright (with whom he scripted The World’s End) and frequent collaborator Frost, he would have perfectly happy had audiences not known ahead of time that extraterrestrials would figure into the mix of their latest movie.

    But when the three mates visited Austin last month on a promotional tour, they readily agreed that, in this era of hard-sell advertising and spoiler-stuffed online posts, it’s hard, and maybe even self-defeating, to keep anything from potential ticketbuyers.

    CultureMap: In a perfect world, would you prefer that audiences not know anything about what happens after the half-hour mark in The World’s End? Or have you always known there’d be no way to keep that a secret?

    Edgar Wright: I think you knew that going in. Even while you’re writing the script, you know that that’s going to be out there. In the same way, like, you couldn’t trailer Shaun of the Dead without showing the zombies. It’s impossible. Nobody went in to see Shaun of the Dead cold. Mind you, it would be an amazing experience if you did, if you didn’t know there’d be zombies in it at all. But then nobody would go and see it. Because there’s no way of trailering something like that without giving a hint of what’s to come.

    So it’s a necessary evil. And also, I think there are lots of surprises still in [The World’s End]. Lots of things that we took off the table from the trailer-makers, where we said, “Don’t show this. Don’t show that. Don’t show this.” Because the thing is, the film isn’t just about its trailer moments. Beyond the sci-fi and the action, it’s actually about the characters.

    When people get bummed out about summer releases and complain, “All the good bits were in the trailer,” that’s usually because the film has nothing else going on. So I would hope that there’s more to chew on in the movie than what you see in the trailer.

    Nick Frost: We always said about Paul as well that the best way to see that was not knowing there was an alien in it.

    Simon Pegg: But that was impossible.

    Frost: In the end, you have to kind of weigh up what you’re willing to exchange, and what you’re willing to fight for.

    Pegg: And you have to think about the big picture. There will be people who actively avoid spoilers and trailers and stuff. And more power to them for being so trusting in terms of coming to see the film on the grounds of what we’ve done before. We know some people have been doggedly careful to avoid everything, and have gone in and been utterly blown away by what happens. But we have to sell this film on a large scale. And unfortunately, you have to give some of it away to get something back.

    CM: Were you ever tempted to go down a different path? Or, more precisely, were you ever tempted to keep going down the same path you travel for the first half-hour?

    Pegg: But we do. That’s the thing. Despite the fact that we take that turn, the film does stay on the same path. It stays about the pub crawl. It’s just that we add a layer of fantastic exacerbation. Which has always kind of been our thing.

    Wright: Because we wanted to make these films like a loose sort of trilogy. In a way, our use of genre – especially in this one – is our way of amplifying a feeling that we have. So the movie is basically about the bittersweet feeling of going back home, and how you find yourself alienated from your hometown. And that’s literally what happens.

    The key thing that’s in the film at the half-hour mark -- without giving too much away -- is that when our hero discovers what’s going on, he’s happy about the revelation. He’s actually smiling about it. Because it’s easier for his to bear the idea of this sort of quiet invasion than it is to face, A, I’m old, and B, my hometown is not as great as I thought it was.

    So in a way, when we first came up with the story idea, the genre element was always a key to it. That’s been true of all three of these films. You could make a straight comedy-drama, and you would reach a different audience – a much smaller audience. What’s nice about doing these movies is that people who wouldn’t go and see a comedy-drama in a million years will actually be forced to think about their relationships and their past, and the people they know, and the emotions that they have that they haven’t thought about for a while.

    Pegg: And also, this invasion – this sort of galactic event – is not enough to deter Gary from his determination to finish 12 pints of beer. And that says something about the motivations of addicted people: They put that ahead of everything. It becomes the most important thing for them. Even in the face of an alien invasion. And Gary uses it to keep his friends with him. Because by the time they’ve had a few drinks, and they fall into that kind of hierarchy they had back in school – they don’t know any better than to follow Gary into certain oblivion. Which, if you remember, is what they say at the start, at the train station.

    Wright: I remember talking with Simon a long, long time ago about Luis Bunuel’s The Exterminating Angel. It’s a great idea: There’s this party that you can never leave. Whatever’s happening, you cannot get out of this party. So I came up with the notion that Gary sort of holds his friends hostage, basically, and says: We are going on this crawl, by hook or by crook. And we always liked the whole idea of the middle bit feeling like a French Occupation thriller. They have to start doing their mission: Pretending to have a good time. They even say that: We’re pretending to have a good time.

    What we really tried to do here is create these Trojan horses, so that it’s a sci-fi action-comedy – but the relationship stuff is really what this movie is all about. And that’s something you can’t spoil in the trailers. We like the idea of sort of smuggling in deeper themes into something that’s big and silly and action packed.

    (Prior to opening Friday at theaters and drive-ins everywhere, The World’s End will be screened Thursday as part of a triple feature with Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz in Houston and other areas throughout civilized world. You can find a complete list of theaters hosting the “Cornetto Trilogy”marathon here.)

    The World's End theatrical poster

    The World's End movie poster
    HDWallpapers.com
    The World's End theatrical poster
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    Kelly Clarkson Concert Review

    Sold-out Houston crowd sings along at Kelly Clarkson's epic rodeo return

    Craig Hlavaty
    Mar 14, 2026 | 8:50 pm
    Kelly Clarkson RodeoHouston 2026
    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo
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    A cross between Pat Benatar and Reba, with a dash of Aretha, Kelly Clarkson headlined Saturday afternoon’s RodeoHouston matinee, 22 years since she debuted at NRG Stadium, in front of 70,007.

    It was a true “Ladies Day Out” at RodeoHouston for Clarkson, with roving multigenerational groups of women making the rounds under an only mildly-oppressive Houston sun. Between Clarkson, Lainey Wilson, Megan Moroney, and Lizzo, the 2026 rodeo concert season has been dominated by strong female artists, with Clarkson the most decorated.

    The last time Kelly Clarkson played RodeoHouston in 2004, she shared a Tuesday night bill with Y2K it couple Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey, a match made in MTV ratings heaven. Other acts on the rodeo roster that year included John Mayer, George Strait, Reba, Willie Nelson, and — fresh from her first stint with Destiny’s Child — Beyonce shared the stage with Alicia Keys two nights later.

    The first American Idol winner in 2002, when daresay that truly meant something, she and Carrie Underwood remain the two most successful of winners of Idol all these years later. Clarkson has a permanent seat at the table in Nashville, winning back-to-back CMA Female Vocalist of the Year honors in 2012 and 2013 and never shying away from a little more twang in her power pop. Right out of the chute, she was repping country style, hard to shake when you’re born and raised near Fort Worth.

    Clarkson’s current live act has been honed by various residencies at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, playing in front of thousands of Sin City customers. She’s a part of a rare group of performers like Jennifer Lopez, Cyndi Lauper, and even Dolly Parton herself who can command multiple nights. With her syndicated chat show — where her popular genre-bending “Kellyoke” segments were born — ending later this year, it wouldn’t be shocking to see this working mom jump back into regular touring outside of Clark County, especially considering Saturday’s afternoon drawl.

    Clarkson emerged from the cocoon of the rodeo’s revolving star stage just before 4:15 pm in a black, glittery jumpsuit straight from Ozzy’s wardrobe closet with “Favorite Kind of High” from 2023’s divorce record Chemistry, her latest album release. The hard-driving Heart-rock of “Behind These Hazel Eyes” debuted some annoying, intermittent sound skippage but Clarkson’s sold-out crowd filled in any gaps. Her pipes were just too strong.

    A nod to the female country legends of rodeo’s past, Clarkson gave Tanya Tucker’s “It’s A Little Too Late” a widescreen Vegas makeover with horns and fiddle. “This isn’t sweat, it’s glow,” Clarkson joked, kicking off the torch song “Because Of You.” The singalong of “Breakaway” could more than likely be heard out in the carnival, the first big “Kellyoke” moment of the afternoon.

    For “Walk Away” and “Didn’t I,” the horn section and co-ed backup singers that have made Clarkson’s Vegas shows so bombastic got a workout. Clarkson reeled out her Jason Aldean duet “Don’t You Wanna Stay” as a solo. The release was her first country hit and was one of the biggest country duets of the 2010s.

    “It’s way more sad this way,” she laughed. “Because I guess he didn’t stay.”

    Clarkson threw in 2025’s bar-crawling single "Where Have You Been" in the mix, going rogue from the supplied setlist, accentuating the Queen-esque licks with her own highs. Her post-Idol debut rave-up “Miss Independent” set the table for “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You),”

    Clarkson sent the crowd out pogo-ing and screaming with “Since U Been Gone,” making her exit in a SUV like a rock star, with plenty of sunshine to spare.

    Setlist

    Favorite Kind Of High
    Behind These Hazel Eyes
    My Life Would Suck Without You
    It’s A Little Too Late (Tanya Tucker cover)
    Because Of You
    Breakaway
    Heat
    Walk Away
    Didn’t I
    Heartbeat Song
    Don’t You Wanna Stay
    Where Have You Been
    Miss Independent
    Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)
    Since U Been Gone

    2004 RodeoHouston Lineup

    Mar 2: John Mayer
    Mar 3: George Strait
    Mar 4: Wynonna Judd
    Mar 5: B2K / Bow Wow
    Mar 6: Martina McBride
    Mar 7: Reba McEntire
    Mar 8: Enrique Iglesias
    Mar 9: Alan Jackson
    Mar 10: Amy Grant / Vince Gill
    Mar 11: Clay Walker
    Mar 12: Legends in Concert (Dwight Yoakam, Buck Owens, Marty Stuart, Connie Smith)
    Mar 13: Randy Travis
    Mar 14: Bronco / Jennifer Peña
    Mar 15: Dierks Bentley / Robert Earl Keen
    Mar 16: Jessica Simpson & Nick Lachey / Kelly Clarkson
    Mar 17: Dierks Bentley / Keith Urban / Kenny Chesney
    Mar 18: Alicia Keys / Beyoncé
    Mar 19: Pat Green
    Mar 20: Brooks & Dunn
    Mar 21: Willie Nelson

    Kelly Clarkson RodeoHouston 2026

    Courtesy of Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

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