(SPOILERS AHEAD!)
This movie felt like a complete waste of time to watch, until the last 15-20 minutes of the movie...
If you watched this expecting to see Chandler Riggs (Carl from The Walking Dead) because he's in the main photo on Netflix, then you're going to be disappointed because his role in the movie was so small and he hardly says anything. He was the main reason why I wanted to watch this movie, but I was sad to find he hardly had a role in this movie.
Eva, at first, comes across as a cry-baby and someone who doesn't appreciate her partner and is extremely selfish... Yes, she was... But she is also depressed and scared for her life. When I was sitting through this movie, I thought to myself for the first hour that Eva is the most annoying and selfish woman in the world, but as the movie progressed I started to understand that she's just suffering, she's scared, she's isolated from her family and the world and there's nothing she can do about it. She's bound to feel trapped and controlled, because well - she is. She takes out her frustrations on her partner Will, who goes above and beyond for Eva, his lover.
I'm kind of disappointed that the movie never really tells us about how or why the disease happened, just that it happened and it kills off women and that's that... Felt a bit blunt, as if there's no history/backstory to the 'virus'. It was cheap and boring and it could've been portrayed way better, but instead the directors clearly wanted to make Eva and Will's struggling love story the main centre of attention, rather than the comet disaster itself.
Overall, the ending was very well done. Eva ended up accepting things for what they are and she ends up taking her own life and taking off her hazmat suit on top of a building, ultimately killing her. She breathes in the ashes from the comet and that's that. Will is on the floor, hysterically crying because he knew he had to let her go so they can both be free and move on. It was sad, but it had to happen. There was no way she'd survive the journey they've been on.
It was a good and touching ending, and I'm glad that it ended the way it did (on an emotional note), considering the rest of the movie was garbage and confusing to understand.