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  1. Burt Reynolds plays Sonny Lawson, a divorced and shady real estate salesman. The movie opens with Sonny being told he has a fatal blood disease and a two month to one year life expectancy.The humorous tone of the film is set early in the exchange between Sonny and his doctor, played wonderfully dryly by Norman Fell.

  2. TOP CRITIC. May 9, 2005. Jan 18, 2024. Nov 1, 2019. Aug 2, 2019. After discovering that he has only months to live, Wendell Lawson (Burt Reynolds) tries to settle issues with his family, including ...

    • (76)
    • Burt Reynolds
    • R
    • Burt Reynolds
  3. www.imdb.com › title › tt0077504The End (1978) - IMDb

    May 10, 1978 · The End: Directed by Burt Reynolds. With Burt Reynolds, Dom DeLuise, Sally Field, Strother Martin. Slapstick black comedy about a man (Reynolds) who finds that he hasn't much longer to live and has bungled his attempts at suicide.

    • (4.3K)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Burt Reynolds
    • 1978-05-10
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  5. The End is a 1978 American black comedy film directed by and starring Burt Reynolds, written by Jerry Belson, and with music composed by Paul Williams. The film also stars Dom DeLuise along with Sally Field, Strother Martin, David Steinberg, Joanne Woodward, Norman Fell, Myrna Loy, Kristy McNichol, Pat O'Brien, Robby Benson and Carl Reiner .

  6. Recent reviews. Burt Reynolds plays Burt Reynolds masquerading as a man named Sonny Lawson, a real estate promoter, who finds out he has between three months and a year to live, in this wildly uneven dark comedy. It's the type of movie that would not be made today. In fact, it was even controversial at the time of its release.

    • (1.6K)
    • United Artists, Gordon-Reynolds Productions
    • Burt Reynolds
  7. Film Movie Reviews The End1978. The End. 1978. 1h 40m. R. Comedy/Drama. Where to Watch. Buy. $14.99. ... More about The End. TV. TV. The Flash can’t outrun the end of its first season.

  8. www.metacritic.com › movie › the-endThe End - Metacritic

    The End initially promises to answer in disturbing comic form, mixing pathos and pratfalls to fashion a pitch-black comedy about a man freaking out on the edge of oblivion. But in the face of such a risky subject, director-star Reynolds and writer Jerry Belson get cold feet. [22 May 1978, p.72] Read More. By David Ansen FULL REVIEW.

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