Upper Dublin Police Department is relocating to 803 Loch Alsh Avenue on Friday, December 12.

  •  Non-emergency police services will remain at 520 Virginia Drive until 6:00 p.m. on December 12.
  • After 6:00 p.m., please visit 803 Loch Alsh Avenue for all non-emergency police needs.

A map of the entrance and parking for police services is available here.

This Is The Endmovie | 2013 Review

Directorially, Rogen and Evan Goldberg blend genres with surprising effectiveness. It pivots from a claustrophobic chamber piece (the house) to a full-scale creature feature with demonic iconography. By using a literal Book of Revelation backdrop for a stoner comedy, the film achieves a surreal juxtaposition: the most "immoral" characters in Hollywood are forced to engage with the most traditional concepts of morality and divinity. Conclusion

The film’s greatest strength is its meta-casting. By having Seth Rogen, James Franco, Jonah Hill, and others play exaggerated, often unflattering versions of themselves, the movie critiques the public’s perception of celebrity. We see them not as heroes, but as coddled, selfish, and ill-equipped man-children. The humor comes from the friction between their "real-world" celebrity status and their total uselessness in a crisis. Redemption Through Bromance This Is the EndMovie | 2013

This Is the End succeeds because it is more than just a series of inside jokes. It is a satire of Hollywood entitlement that concludes with a surprisingly sweet message: in the face of total annihilation, the only thing that matters is how we treat the people we claim to love. Directorially, Rogen and Evan Goldberg blend genres with

At its core, the movie is an examination of male friendship—specifically the "bromance." The rift between Seth Rogen and Jay Baruchel serves as the emotional anchor. In a biblical sense, the "Rapture" functions as a cosmic litmus test for their character. The film posits that true maturity (and salvation) isn't found in career success or fame, but in genuine self-sacrifice and the ability to put a friend's needs above one's own ego. Genre Subversion The humor comes from the friction between their