Echoes of Tomorrow
- Tagline
- When destiny is written in ash, every choice echoes through time.
- Description
- In an apocalyptic future where prophecy spells doom, 'Echoes of Tomorrow' weaves a tale of fate intertwined with the crumbling vestiges of civilization. Amidst the ruins, a sarcastic bartender named Fillet Wray serves the last dregs of hope to weary travelers. When a mysterious cowboy with a troubled past, played by Jonathan Fries, wanders into the bar, whispers of a forgotten prophecy resurface. Edward Barnacle-old steps into the boots of a grizzled marshal, whose destiny is irrevocably linked to the cowboy's. Together, in a world where the sky weeps soot and the ground bleeds despair, they confront their demons and duel with destiny. Directed by David Finch, 'Echoes of Tomorrow' dares to ask: can the course of fate be altered, or is the future eternally etched in stone?
- MpaaRating
- PG-13
- PopularityScore
- 2.30
- ReleaseDate
- 11/03/2022
- Genre
- Tragedy
- Director(s)
- Cast
Critic Reviews
4.50
Ah, 'Echoes of Tomorrow', a movie that dabbles with the profundity of a fortune cookie. With a tagline hinting at a narrative deeper than the Mariana Trench, the film somehow manages to be as shallow as a kiddie pool. Our 'hero', Fillet Wray, serves hope like it's a flat soda, leaving us to wonder if the future's so bleak, why bother with a refill? Jonathan Fries strides in as the 'mysterious cowboy'—a trope so tired, it could use a shot of espresso from Fillet's bar. And let's not forget Edward Barnacle-old as the 'grizzled marshal'—because nothing screams originality like a character carved out of a Clint Eastwood fever dream. Directed by David Finch, who must've thought 'apocalypse' meant killing off creativity, we're left with a movie that insists it's profound, yet the only thing it alters is the viewer's will to live. PG-13, because apparently, crushing ennui is suitable for teenagers.