After a stay in an asylum, Jacob takes a job as an English lecturer and begins a disastrous affair with Rennie, the wife of a colleague.After a stay in an asylum, Jacob takes a job as an English lecturer and begins a disastrous affair with Rennie, the wife of a colleague.After a stay in an asylum, Jacob takes a job as an English lecturer and begins a disastrous affair with Rennie, the wife of a colleague.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Gail Gilmore
- Miss Gibson
- (as Gail Gibson)
Graham Jarvis
- Dr. Carter
- (as Graham P. Jarvis)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaTo date the film has never been submitted for a UK certificate. Its British release was without a certificate at the ICA Cinema in the Mall, London, showing at weekends from 17 June 1972. It has not been commercially released in the UK since, and has not to date been shown on British television.
- Quotes
Jacob Horner: This may sound somewhat theatrical to you... but would you mind telling me where I could go for 58 dollars and 75 cents?
- Crazy creditsThe closing credits play over footage of the moonshot, and end with the sound of Jacob Horner moaning.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976)
Featured review
Boy, people really love it or hate it, don't they?
Man, it is hard to digest some of the bile and acrid animosity of many of the comments here. I saw this when it first came out right as I was about to graduate high school in 1970, and I loved it. I had not read John Barth's novel, so I had no prejudice about the approach. I have watched the film a couple of times since on video (though it is virtually impossible to find) and must testify it more than holds up. Stacey Keach really gives a great, subtly nuanced performance (perhaps the best of his career when he was still getting 'serious' roles) as the guy plagued by occasional catatonia, and James Earl Jones is also fantastic as a brilliant, maverick innovator of psychiatry (think Wilhelm Reich by way of Malcolm X) who, at the end, may be a bit too godlike for his own good. I personally think Terry Southern is a wonderful writer, and I love all of the films from his work from the more favorably acknowledged, like DR. STRANGELOVE and MAGIC Christian, to the less so (CANDY, which is probably my favorite). There are some crazy juxtapositions here as well as absurd humor (that would do the 1920s-30s surrealists proud), but the humor is not stupid by any means. Director Aram Avakian and Terry Southern were a good pairing. It's too bad that they never did another film together. I can only guess that this dark, dark comedy that is about America in the sixties and about human vulnerability, hubris and arrogance touched many raw nerves with not only some of the IMDb commentators, but the few people who saw it on its initial release. A totally uncompromising picture with the courage of it's twisted convictions. The intention of director, screenwriter and cast was to rattle complacent, uptight people's cages -and, judging from the invective here, I'd say they succeeded in spades. I will echo: whomever owns the rights to END OF THE ROAD, put it out on DVD - NOW!
helpful•204
- chrisdfilm
- Jan 10, 2006
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Der Weg in den Abgrund
- Filming locations
- Villanova, Pennsylvania, USA(Amtrak's Paoli station)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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