In a world of comedy and horror, we live a different story where zombie threatens the end of the world Little Haven quiet city. Perhaps there will be more challenges at Christmas as Anna and her friends face life in danger to continue their way of survival, and face death in a desperate race to reach their loved ones. It's a journey Anna and her friends run, but eventually they discover that no one is safe in this world, which will make it seem natural.
As a palate cleanse for the endless parade of Hallmark Christmas movies, Anna and the Apocalypse serves up a wacky diversion, but not without a little darkness and tragedy on the side.
Admittedly original for a horrific holiday hoot, McPhail's off-kilter Scottish musical plays a delightful naughty note for those looking to celebrate the end-of-the-year seasonal greetings with an (un)deadly bang.
"Anna and the Apocalypse" tries too hard to do too much, but this multigenre hybrid has more than enough good cheer to get viewers through another holiday season on this troubled planet.
Anna and her friends come to understand the most frightening aspect of adulthood, realizing that friends and parents won't always be there to help you, and that the biggest fear is having to stand on your own two feet.
If you're looking for polish or sophistication from "Anna And The Apocalypse," you're chomping on the wrong neck. But the songs are bouncy, the performances fresh and the gore happily not in any way related to real life. You got to love that.