Perfectly timed for the weekend, the new boozy movie The World’s End hits theaters today and the reviews are rolling in. Starring Simon Pegg, Martin Freeman, Nick Frost, Paddy Considine, and Eddie Marsan the movie takes sloshed spin on the old drunken-middle-aged-reliving-the-glory-years story as it centers around a group of friends who attempt twelve pubs and twelve pints wrapping up at the aptly named The World’s End drinkery. Of course the boys can’t finish their twelve beers, an unusual feat for our brethren across the pond, so naturally they team up for a World’s End reunion some twenty years later in an attempt to finish what they started. But keep one drink-induced droopy eye out for an unexpected surprise…

You can check out the trailer for The World’s End below and for the wary but interested out there, be sure to check out what the professionals have to say. The flick is already garnering rave reviews, posting an impressive 93% certified fresh approval rating on movie aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.

Watch the trailer for The World’s End right here:

Ty Burr, Boston Globe: “‘The World’s End/ is more frantic than funny, but it’s still funny enough—just—to outweigh its own silliness. The third and weakest in the ‘Three Flavours Cornetto’ trilogy of director-writer Edgar Wright, writer-star Simon Pegg, and costar Nick Frost, the movie’s conceptually dodgier than 2004’s ‘Shaun of the Dead’ or 2007’s ‘Hot Fuzz,’ juggling as it does an epic pub crawl, the middle-age crises of childhood pals.”

Claudia Puig, USA Today: “The premise of visiting so many pubs as a narrative device, however, bogs down the initially energetic pacing and goofiness. Piling on the mayhem renders The World’s End a sometimes chaotic and uneven comedy.”

Peter Travers, Rolling Stone: “Look, I can’t say much. Spoiling the secrets of this movie is a no-no. I can say that these five actors are sheer comic perfection. I can point out that director Edgar Wright (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World) achieves just the right balance between fun and funnier. And I can add that the delicious Rosamund Pike, who just got the lead with Ben Affleck in David Fincher’s Gone Girl, shows up to ignite sparks with Gary and Steven. But the best I can do without being accused of ruining the surprise is to remind you that Frost and screenwriters Wright and Pegg also joined twisted forces on 2004’s Shaun of the Dead (zombiefest) and 2007’s Hot Fuzz (gorefest), two films that traveled quite a distance from the natural order.”

Kyle Smith, New York Post: “You can’t blame Wright and Pegg for the bad timing of putting their film out two months after the similar but much funnier comedy ‘This Is the End.’ No, you can only blame them for wasting your time trying to cover up the lameness of their jokes with the loudness of their effects.”