Menu
Nothing Poster

Nothing

What if you wished everyone - and everything - would just go away!
2003 | 90m | English

(6240 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1.0 (history)

Details

The film tells the story of two good friends who live together, Andrew, an agoraphobic travel agent who works from his home, and Dave, a loser who works in an office where he is treated with contempt. Just when it seems things can't get any worse for the two, the entire world outside of their house disappears and is replaced with an endless white void.
Release Date: Sep 09, 2003
Director: Vincenzo Natali
Writer: Vincenzo Natali, Andrew Miller, Andrew Lowery, David Hewlett
Genres: Comedy, Fantasy, Science Fiction
Keywords loser, bullying, leere, best friend, cowardliness
Production Companies Senator International, Copperheart Entertainment, Odeon Films, 49th Parallel Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 05, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers

Extras

No extras available.

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
David Hewlett Dave
Andrew Miller Andrew
Gordon Pinsent Man In Suit
Marie-Josée Croze Sara
Andrew Lowery Crawford
Elana Shilling Little Girl
Soo Garay Little Girl's Mother
Martin Roach Co-Worker
Angelo Tsarouchas Foreman
Rick Parker Mounted Police Officer
Maurice Dean Wint Narrator (voice)
Name Job
Michael Andrews Original Music Composer
Vincenzo Natali Story, Director
Andrew Miller Story, Screenplay
Andrew Lowery Screenplay
Anastasia Masaro Art Direction
Plato Fountidakis Stunt Coordinator
Craig Henighan Sound Supervisor, Sound Designer
Sean Jensen Steadicam Operator, Camera Operator
Neil Davison Stunt Double
Rick Parker Animal Wrangler
Derek Rogers Director of Photography
Michele Conroy Editor
Peter Cosco Production Design
Jasna Stefanovic Production Design
Alex Kavanagh Costume Design
Bob Munroe Visual Effects Producer
Bret Culp Visual Effects Supervisor
Paul Rapovski Stunt Coordinator
Stephen Barden Sound Supervisor, Dialogue Editor, Sound Designer
Todd Warren Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Paula Devonshire Line Producer
Richard J. Anobile Post Production Supervisor
Bill Spahic First Assistant Director
Joanne Tickle Second Assistant Director
Lisa Burling Script Supervisor
Ken Chubb Script Consultant
Robin D. Cook Casting
Nicole Hilliard-Forde Casting
Peter Atto Set Decoration
Kent McIntyre Set Buyer
Jon Beer Set Dresser
Craig Harris Set Dresser
Jon Bankson Construction Coordinator
Mark Bryson Head Carpenter
Jay Molloy Standby Carpenter
Steve Meil Key Scenic Artist
Yassar Monteleone First Assistant Art Direction
Dan Milligan Storyboard Artist
Kimberly Killam Production Accountant
Mark Hunter Props
Peter Miskimmin Props
Midori Nagai Costume Set Supervisor
Rob Mountjoy First Assistant Camera
Tara Dixit Second Assistant Camera
Sean Moore Camera Trainee
Pief Weyman Still Photographer
Jeremy Hudspith Gaffer
Derek Porter Best Boy Electric
David Riding Electrician
Scott Tremblay Electrician
Eric Berger Key Grip
Carl Savage Dolly Grip
Jeff Wachsmann Best Boy Grip
John MacLean Grip
Steven Bourne Sound Recordist
Jorge Muniz Boom Operator
Kelly Wright Sound Recordist
Michael Sinnott Stunt Double
Barb Barkley Key Makeup Artist
Katrin Clark Key Hair Stylist
John LaForet Special Effects Coordinator
Allan Cooke Makeup Effects Designer
Paul Jones Makeup Effects Designer
Patrick Baxter Special Effects Makeup Artist
Matthew Galliford Special Effects Makeup Artist
Gérald Altenburg Special Effects Makeup Artist
Mark Ahee Key Special Effects
Kirk Middleton Special Effects
Jason McKenzie Production Coordinator
Siegfried Kopp Third Assistant Director
Michael Bawcutt Assistant Production Coordinator
Rita Bertucci Extras Casting
Matthew Spahic Animal Wrangler
Beverly Warren Publicist
Monica Ionson Assistant Accountant
John Temou Location Manager
Mauro Sepe Assistant Location Manager
Dave Herchenrader Location Production Assistant
Steve Angel Animation Director
Julian Grey Animation Director
Kevin Murphy Second Unit Director of Photography
Jill Purdy ADR Editor
Kevin Banks Music Editor
Alex Bullick First Assistant Sound Editor
John Sievert Foley Artist
Peter Persaud Foley Recordist
Gina Gyles Assistant Foley Artist
Andrew Tay Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Christian Carruthers Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Matthew McKenzie ADR Recordist
Colin McLellan ADR Recordist
Jamie Gould Sound Re-Recording Assistant
Kenn Elliott Colorist
Mike Dubroskie Colorist
David Hewlett Story
Name Title
Vincenzo Natali Executive Producer
Steven Hoban Producer
Noah Segal Executive Producer
Andrew Lowery Executive Producer
Andrew Miller Executive Producer
Hanno Huth Executive Producer
Nohuhiko Sakotu Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 12 29 4
2024 5 12 33 5
2024 6 11 20 5
2024 7 10 14 7
2024 8 10 19 6
2024 9 8 11 6
2024 10 9 14 5
2024 11 7 11 4
2024 12 6 10 4
2025 1 7 15 4
2025 2 5 7 3
2025 3 4 7 3
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 2 3 2
2025 11 3 5 2
2025 12 3 6 1
2026 1 3 6 1
2026 2 0 1 0

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 843 915
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 91 324

Return to Top

Reviews

misubisu
7.0

### **Review: *Nothing (2003)*** **Score: 7/10** *Nothing* is a bizarre, philosophically audacious, and surprisingly poignant low-budget Canadian comedy that operates on a premise of pure, surreal logic. Directed by Vincenzo Natali (*Cube*), it follows two chronically miserable best friends, D ... ave and Andrew, whose lives are a cascade of petty humiliations and cosmic bad luck. When their world literally begins to disappear around them—starting with a pesky talking squirrel—they discover they have a unique, nihilistic power: anything they agree "is nothing" ceases to exist. What begins as a juvenile game of erasing annoyances spirals into an existential crisis as their entire reality threatens to vanish into a void of their own making. **What Works Brilliantly:** * **A High-Concept Premise Executed with Conviction:** The film fully commits to its absurdist, metaphysical rules. The visual effects, while deliberately simple, are effective in portraying the unnerving, clean white void that consumes the world piece by piece. The concept serves as a darkly hilarious metaphor for depression, denial, and the desire to opt out of a painful reality. * **Sharp, Dark Humour & Strong Chemistry:** The lead duo, played by David Hewlett and Andrew Miller, share a convincingly worn-in friendship. Their witty, cynical banter carries the film, making their descent into cosmic negation both funny and strangely tragic. The humour is bone-dry and perfectly suited to the film's deadpan exploration of utter despair. * **Unexpected Emotional Depth:** Beneath the absurdity lies a genuine, melancholic heart. The film becomes a story about the bonds that tie us to existence, no matter how flawed, and the terrifying freedom (and loneliness) of absolute negation. The final act achieves a quiet, poetic resonance that elevates it beyond its comedic shell. **Why It’s Not a Higher Score:** * **Deliberately Repetitive Structure:** The middle section of the film can feel cyclical, as the pair go through the motions of erasing more of their world. This repetition mirrors their stagnant despair but may test the patience of some viewers. * **Low-Budget Limitations:** The film's aesthetic is intentionally drab and claustrophobic, which serves its theme but can be visually unappealing. Some of the more ambitious "disappearance" scenes are conceptually strong but show the constraints of their budget. * **An Acquired Taste:** This is niche, philosophical cinema wrapped in a slacker-comedy disguise. Its particular blend of existential dread and dry humour will not resonate with everyone. **Verdict:** *Nothing* is a clever, courageous, and oddly moving cult film. It’s a minimalist thought experiment that uses its limited resources to explore maximally big ideas about meaning, friendship, and the will to exist. While its pacing and aesthetic won’t be for all tastes, for viewers who connect with its unique wavelength, it offers a funny, bleak, and ultimately haunting experience that sticks with you far longer than its 70-minute runtime. A hidden gem for fans of high-concept, talky indie sci-fi. **Watch if:** You love existential, low-budget sci-fi (like *Cube* or *Coherence*), dark philosophical comedies, or films about nihilism and friendship. **Skip if:** You require conventional plots, high-energy pacing, or polished visuals. This is a talky, conceptual film about two guys making the universe disappear from a suburban living room.

Jan 07, 2026