Greatest Zombie Films: 2007 - 2009
(chronological by time period and film title)
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Title Screen
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Zombie Films |
Poster
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28 Weeks Later (2007,
UK/Sp.)
d. Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, 100 minutes,
Fox Atomic/20th Century Fox
Tagline(s): "When Days Turn to Weeks," and
"It All Begins Again."
Setting: In the English countryside, then post-apocalyptic
London, and the "Green Zone's District One.
Story: In the pre-credits sequence, married couple Don Harris
(Robert Carlyle) and Alice (Catherine McCormack) were barricaded
in an English countryside cottage outside London with an elderly
couple and a few other survivors. While preparing dinner, they
were attacked by infected zombies - Don abandoned everyone to escape,
but Alice seemingly perished. Seven months later (28
weeks later), after the "Rage" virus had decimated the
UK (and made London depopulated and desolate) and most of the infected
had died of starvation, the quarantined country was slowly being
repopulated with help from the US military forces and NATO. In
a small, secured area of eastern London called District One, Don
and Alice's surviving children, teenaged Tammy (Imogen Poots) and
young son Andy (Mackintosh Muggleton) became the first wave of
pseudo-colonists or repatriates, moving to a safe 'Green Zone'
(the Isle of Dogs) to repopulate and start again. The area was
guarded by Sergeant Doyle (Jeremy Renner) and helicopter pilot
Chief Flynn (Harold Perrineau), and their father Don was the District's
caretaker of electricity and power. To find mementos, Tammy and
Andy returned to the site of their parents' cottage and found their
mother, infected with the virus but not overtaken (was she immune?)
by the Rage virus. During his wife's quarantine in the District,
guilt-ridden Don was infected by her saliva during a kiss - afterwards,
he killed her and other soldiers. A lock-down and Code Red was
ordered and the District (composed of both civilians and infected)
was fire-bombed, although the outbreak of zombie infections and
attacks continued to spread. Tammy and Andy escaped the District,
with the aid of Army doctor Scarlet (Rose Byrne) and Sgt. Doyle.
Scarlet believed the young kids carried a natural antidote to Rage.
Eventually, some of the group made it into the dark London Underground
subway, where Scarlet was killed by a rampaging Don, who was then
shot and killed by Tammy. Andy had been bitten and became a
carrier of the virus. Flynn flew the young kids
across the English Channel to France. The film ended 28 days later,
with the infection presumably reaching France.
Notable: An equally-great follow-up or sequel to Danny Boyle's
hit 28
Days Later... (2002).
A bleak, tense, gory, action-oriented, and violent film with a new
cast, and an open-ended conclusion. |
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Diary of the Dead (2007)
d. George A. Romero, 95 minutes, Artfire
Films/Romero-Grunwald Productions
Tagline(s): "Shoot the Dead," and "Where Will
You Be When the End Begins?"
Setting: Various locales in mostly rural Pennsylvania.
Story: A worldwide epidemic and vivified zombie
uprising was discovered while film students from the University
of Pittsburgh were shooting a project for school - originally a
low-budget mummy horror film. It became The
Death of Death,
a docu-style zombie movie project (the "film within a film"),
professionally directed by student Jason Creed (Joshua Close) with
the help of his girlfriend Debra Moynihan (Michelle Morgan).
They and a group of other students were traveling in a Winnebago
RV with their professor Andrew Maxwell (Scott Wentworth), while
they were being chased down by flesh-eating zombies. In a hospital,
they found infected, undead zombie medical personnel on the attack.
The group realized they could kill the zombies by shooting them
in the head. After encountering more zombies at dynamite-hurling,
deaf Amish farmer Samuel's (R .D. Reid) barn, the group came upon
radicalized African-American survivors who had stocked a fortified
warehouse with supplies. Then, at Debra's home in Scranton, PA,
it was discovered that her family members had already become zombies.
In the conclusion set at fellow film student Ridley Wilmot's (Phillip
Riccio) fortified mansion, equipped with a steel-reinforced panic
room - Ridley had already been turned into an undead zombie. He
bit and infected Jason (who begged to be shot in the head by Debra).
As the film ended, sole survivor Debra spoke for her dead boyfriend
who believed the government lied about the causes of the zombie
resurrection and vowed to show the world the truth. Sealed inside
the panic room, and surrounded by zombies, she uploaded to the
Web (with scary music added and her own narration) their first-person
video footage (from surveillance cameras, news footage, digital
camcorders, YouTube, cell-phone cameras, etc.), to record happenings
for whomever was left after the catastrophic events.
Notable: This fifth low-budget film by George A. Romero
was considered an updated, 21st-century reimagining of Romero's
first film - not really a sequel. The government reported that the
zombie apocalypse was brought on by a "previously
unknown viral strain." Romero designed it for the YouTube
and media-saturated generation, similar in style to The
Blair Witch Project (1999) and Cloverfield (2008). The
entire movie was a film within a film. It served as a treatise
on our video camera-obsessed culture, with all of the footage from
camcorders. |
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Planet Terror (2007)
(aka Grindhouse: Planet Terror)
d. Robert Rodriguez, 91 minutes, Dimension
Films/Troublemaker Studios/Rodriguez International Pictures/The Weinstein
Company
Tagline(s): "The Last Hope For Humanity...
Rests on a High-Power Machine Gun!" and "FULLY LOADED,"
and "You Might Feel a Little Prick."
Setting: Rural areas in Texas, and Tulum, Mexico (epilogue).
Story: Texas pole-dancer (or stripper) Cherry Darling (Rose
McGowan) quit her low-paying, go-go dancing job. Meanwhile, ruthless
black market gang leader Abby (Naveen Andrews) (a chemical engineer)
disputed with a group of renegade officers in an abandoned, remote
military base led by demented, double-crossing Captain Muldoon
(Bruce Willis). Everyone
was infected by the release of a deadly, experimental biochemical,
green nerve gas agent (DC2, code named Project Terror) during
a shootout, causing an onslaught of flesh-eating, mutant "sickos"
(zombie-like creatures). There was an assortment of other characters
affected, including strong-willed, pain-inducing Dr. William Block
(Josh Brolin) whose bi-sexual anesthesiologist wife Dakota (Marley
Shelton) was suspected of being a cheating lesbian with Tammy (singer
Stacy "Fergie" Ferguson).
The doctor began to see increased numbers of infected, zombie patients
(walking dead) covered in sores, pus, and rotting flesh, and very
hungry for flesh. Hillbilly J.T. Hague (Jeff Fahey) was the owner
of the run-down Bone Shack BBQ restaurant, where Cherry met up
with her untrustworthy, ex-boyfriend and Mexican tow-truck driver
El Wray (Freddy Rodriguez). His vehicle crashed, and after "sickos" attacked
and tore off Cherry's leg, she was taken
to the hospital where the sinister Dr. Block amputated her leg
(replaced at first with a wooden table leg, and then with a machine
gun). Block also murderously injected his wife's hands with a paralyzing
anesthetic before learning, to his shock, that the morgue's bodies
had disappeared. The local Sheriff, Hague's brother (Michael Biehn),
arrested El Wray but then the struggling group of survivors,
including Wray, Cherry, Dakota, Sheriff Hague, and J.T. had to
band together to survive when the number of infected and "sickos" grew
substantially and caused total mayhem. During the chaos, Muldoon
explained that he and other soldiers in Afghanistan had located
and killed Osama Bin Laden. Instead of being hailed as heroes,
they were gassed with the chemical weapon DC2. He told how his
strategy (unsuccessful) was to find a cure for "sickos" by
gassing the entire Texas town and then creating a cure from the
survivors. The film concluded with the detonation and destruction
of the military base, and the deaths of almost everyone except
Cherry. In the epilogue a year later, she was on a remote Tulum
(Mexico) Caribbean ocean-side beach, with her newborn child (fathered
by El Wray), hoping to create a new society with other survivors
- away from the world-wide zombie outbreak.
Notable: This was the Grindhouse double-feature partner
with Quentin Tarantino's Death
Proof. The violent, bloody, sleazy and extreme movie was deliberately
created as homage to 1970s exploitation pictures, normally theatrically
shown in a "grindhouse" theatre. The parody included
bad lighting, fuzzy and scratched, fading film stock and poorly-focused
softcore sex scenes. The tongue-in-cheek film was even missing
a reel in the middle - typical of many grindhouse movie houses.
It opened with a fake trailer for the bloodthirsty,
Death Wish-like assassin "Mexploitation" thriller Machete (a
real movie made by Rodriguez in 2010, with a sequel in 2013) with
Danny Trejo. When the experimental double-bill idea failed,
the Weinstein Company distributors withdrew the combined film
from release, and released each film as a single feature. |
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[REC] (2007, Sp.)
d. Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza, 78 minutes, Castelao Producciones/Filmax
Tagline(s): "Trapped. No Mercy. No Escape.
No One Gets Out Alive," and "The Movie That Inspired Quarantine,"
and "ONE WITNESS, ONE CAMERA."
Setting: Set in an apartment building in Barcelona,
Spain.
Story: The main character was pretty Angela Vidal (Manuela
Velasco), the young host of a Barcelona, Spain late-night, documentary
TV show titled "While You Sleep." During one episode's
human-interest, reality-TV story, she was accompanied by her cameraman
Pablo (Pablo Rosso) (never shown) and 'on-the-job' firemen Manu (Ferran
Terraza) and Alex (David Vert). She joined them as they entered a
local apartment building after an emergency call. A diseased, elderly,
disheveled occupant Mrs. Izquierdo
(Martha Carbonell) suddenly attacked a policeman and one of the firemen.
Soon after, the virus-infected individuals rapidly became rabid
and bit others, unleashing the virus. Earlier, a rabid dog named
Max (the cause of the virus?) that belonged to young (and ill) apartment
dweller Jennifer (Claudia Silva), had been euthanized at a veterinarian's
office. The apartment was completely cordoned off, locked-down, and
quarantined to prevent a further viral outbreak, trapping unlucky
cops, firemen, reporters, and occupants inside. The
sick young Jennifer vomited blood over the face of her mother Mari Carmen
(María
Lanau), and bit a health inspector - it was the start of a building-wide
outbreak, with the residents turning into bloodthirsty zombies
hunting others and causing many infections and deaths. In
the startling ending, it was revealed that the cause of the attacks
was biologically-caused demonic possession. The apartment's penthouse
was inhabited by an emaciated, demonically-possessed young Romanian
girl named Tristana Medeiros (Javier Botet), the victim of rape by
priests. The enzyme that caused possession had become viral, and she
was left in the locked penthouse to die of starvation. In the dark
attic (shot with an infra-red camera), Tristana attacked both Angela
and Pablo, the two remaining survivors - their fates were left unknown.
Notable: This was another example of a found-footage horror
film shot with a shaky, hand-held cam-corder and filmed as a first-person
POV narrative. It came at approximately the same time as two similar
films: The
Zombie Diaries (2006, UK) and Romero's Diary
of the Dead (2007). This fast-paced, straight horror film
was followed by many sequels [REC]
2 (2009), REC 3: Genesis (2012), and REC 4 (2014).
The US remake was Quarantine
(2008), and its sequel Quarantine 2: Terminal (2011). |
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Colin (2008, UK)
d. Marc Price, 97 minutes, Nowhere Fast Productions
Tagline: "The £45 ZOMBIE MOVIE!"
Setting: South London.
Story: After returning from a fight with a bloody hammer
in his hand and a bite on his arm from the scary zombie apocalypse
outside his home, the title character Colin (Alastair Kirton) was bitten
in the neck and infected in his apartment by his own walking dead roommate
Damien (Leigh Crocombe). He was able to kill Damien with a kitchen
knife before dying. Overnight, he transitioned into an undead zombie
himself. After falling out of a window, he staggered through suburban
London as he slowly turned into a decomposing zombie. He showed newfound
hesitation as he came upon his first helpless victim-meal. All around
him, apocalyptic chaos erupted as the dead turned on the living, and
vigilantes hunted them. When he came into contact with his sister Linda
(Daisy Aitkens), she captured him and brought him back home. She wanted
to cure and rehabilitate him - to have him recall or remember his old
life and identity, but he bit her and she slowly 'turned' as well.
In flashback, it was revealed what had happened before the film's start.
He had killed his girlfriend Laura (Leanne Pammen) after she had
infected him. The film ended with a rotting Colin holding a vigil beside
Laura's corpse.
Notable: A very low-budget, low-key indie film (Marc Price's
debut feature film) shot on digital video, and mostly a character study,
with very little plot and dialogue, and told from the personal POV
of a zombie. |
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Dance of the Dead (2008)
d. Gregg Bishop, 97 minutes, Compound B/Ghosthouse
Underground/LionsGate
Tagline(s): "Who to go with...What to wear...How
to survive," and "It's Their Night to Come Alive."
Setting: The small town of Cosa, Georgia.
Story: Dead cadavers were reanimating from their graves
in a small Georgia cemetery near a power plant (contaminating
the ground and air with toxic substances), unreported by
the gravedigger (James Jarrett). It happened soon before the local
Cosa High School senior prom. All the various stereotypical types
of teens existed: jocks, nerds, sci-fi club geeks, wannabe-rockers,
cheerleaders, and bad boys. A number of awkward, loser-outcast
teens at the high school - not attending the prom - included
misfit, class-clown and pizza delivery boy James "Jimmy"
Dunn (Jared Kusnitz), recently-dumped Jimmy's ex-girlfriend Lindsey
(Greyson Chadwick) - the student body VP, Jimmy's nerdy friend
Steven (Chandler Darby), suspended punk rebel and gun-handling
Mohawk-haired Kylerick "Kyle" Grubin
(Justin Welborn) - and there was popular perky blonde cheerleader
Gwendoline "Gwen" (Carissa
Capobianco). The first teen to be attacked by a zombie
at the graveyard was Mitch (Jeff Adelman), who had begun dating
the available Lindsey. A geeky member of the school's sci-fi club,
Rod (Mark Lynch) was also attacked and killed. More random zombie
attacks occurred against the teens in places around town, and Kyle
became the next victim. Many students banded together, armed with
bats, sledgehammers and garden tools, to help save their classmates
attending the school's prom by warning them and planning to blow
up the school (with the zombies inside), although Gwen and Steven
were the next two to become undead. Mismatched Jimmy and Lindsey,
forced to work together again as a couple, became heroes after
surviving, along with Prom Queen Jennifer (Zoe Myers) and the school's
Coach Keel (Mark Oliver). They had successfully detonated the school
and rid the town of the zombies and the plague.
Notable: A low-budget, independent horror comedy (John
Hughes-style) with a cast of unknowns. In some ways, it was a hybrid
of two zombie comedy classics: Return of the Living Dead (1985) and Shaun
of the Dead (2004). After a limited release of only one day,
the film was made available on DVD. |
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Day of the Dead (2008)
d. Steve Miner, 86 minutes, Millennium Films/Universal
Pictures
Tagline(s): "This spring, the dead will
rise!" and "D-Day is Coming!"
Setting: Leadville, Colorado.
Story: In the small town of Leadville, Colorado, a deadly
virus had been unleashed. The US military, led by Captain Rhodes
(Ving Rhames), quarantined the town to prevent the flu-type epidemic
from spreading. The local Pine Valley Medical Center was swarming
with very sick people, treated by an overwhelmed Dr. Logan (Matt
Rippy). Hometown girl Corporal Sarah Bowman (Mena Suvari), part
of the military detachment, was visiting with her ill mother (Linda
Marlowe) in the town, while working with Private Bud Crain (Stark
Sands). Suddenly while at the hospital with Sarah's mother, it
appeared that the many infected town residents were transformed
- first into catatonic states, and then into hungry, flesh-eating,
fast-moving, super-strong, blank-eyed zombies. In the medical center,
as zombified Captain Rhodes pursued Sarah, the Captain was able
to bite and infect Bud. With
sassy, jive-talking Private Salazar (Nick Cannon), Bud and Sarah
fled from the town - Bud was now a slowly-transforming 'vegetarian
zombie.' They heard a radio broadcast with the voice of her brother
Trevor Bowman (Michael Welch) calling for help. As they drove to
the radio station, Sarah ran over her zombie mother. In the radio
station, they found Trevor hidden with his girlfriend Nina (AnnaLyne
McCord). Together, they drove to an isolated, abandoned, Nike missile
silo site for shelter, where they discovered an underground Army
bunker. There, they learned that the virus infections were caused
by the military's biological experiments, led by a zombified Dr.
Engel - he suddenly attacked and killed Dr. Logan. As Sarah prepared
to incinerate a large group of zombies with highly-flammable gas
cylinders, she was attacked by Dr. Engel, but surprisingly Bud
came to her rescue. Engel and other zombies pursued Bud and dismembered
him. After torching the zombies, survivors Sarah, Trevor, and Nina
drove off.
Notable: A loose remake (or more appropriately, a "reimagining")
of Romero's 1985 film (the last of his trilogy), Day of the Dead
(1985),
but mostly unrelated. With a young, under-30 cast, and poorly
done, unconvincing CGI. The badly-reviewed film, without any of Romero's
social-political commentary, did not receive a theatrical release,
and was direct-to-DVD. This was Ving Rhames' second appearance in the
trilogy of Romero remakes – he
also appeared in Dawn
of the Dead (2004). |
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Deadgirl (2008)
d. Marcel Sarmiento and Gadi Harel, 101 minutes, Hollywoodmade/Fine
Films
Tagline(s): "You Never Forget Your First
Time,"
and "Every Generation Has Its Story About the Horror of Growing
Up," and "You'll Never Have Anything Better"
Setting:
Story: Two small-town HS seniors, malicious J.T. (Noah Segan)
and his 'follower' friend Rickie (Shiloh Fernandez), while ditching
school, entered a spooky, abandoned mental hospital at the edge of
town. In the basement behind a rusted door, the two outcasts discovered
a gray-skinned, mute, naked female (nicknamed "Deadgirl")
(Jenny Spain in her debut film) chained to a gurney, and covered
in plastic. The horny J.T. proposed raping the dead woman, but the
conflicted Rickie declined. J.T. realized that the female was moving
and struggling, and trying to bite him. He attempted to strangle
her and kill her with gunshots, but she wouldn't die. The next day,
while Rickie was freeing the undead, zombified woman by himself with
bolt-cutters, he was interrupted when J.T. and his friend Wheeler
(Eric Podnar) arrived. As Rickie hid, he watched as Wheeler and then
J.T. raped 'Deadgirl,' and J.T. was viciously face-scratched. His
infection would soon lead to zombification. Through boasting, word
got out that there was an available-for-sex 'deadgirl' in the asylum.
Another student named Johnny (Andrew DiPalma), the alluring Joann's
(Candice Accola) boyfriend, attempted to have 'Deadgirl' perform
fellatio on him, and his penis was bitten off - he soon became an
infected, undead zombie. Then, J.T. and Wheeler kidnapped Joann (loved
from afar by Rickie), to make her their new 'Deadgirl.' They tied
Joann to the 'Deadgirl' on the table, just as Rickie arrived, armed
with a machete for a rescue. Wheeler's hand was chopped off,
and both Wheeler and J.T. were fed to the flesh-hungry 'Deadgirl.'
During the chaos that ensued as Joann and Rickie fled together, 'Deadgirl'
escaped from the basement, and Joann was mortally-wounded - stabbed
in the back by J.T. She coughed blood into Rickie's face. Zombified
J.T. proposed biting Joann before she died in order to make her
the next undead sex slave. In the concluding sequence, Rickie
was keeping Joann in the basement as his new, nicely-dressed 'Deadgirl.'
Notable: A truly original, disturbing, dark and disgusting
exploitative film, and a treatise on female objectification. A low-budget
independent film from first-time directors. |
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Pontypool (2008, Can.)
d. Bruce McDonald, 93 minutes, Maple Pictures/Ponty Up Pictures/Shadow
Shows/IFC Films
Tagline(s): "Shut Up or Die," or "Words
lose their meaning when you repeat them."
Setting: Small town of Pontypool, Ontario, Canada.
Story: On his way to work during a heavy blizzard, caustic and
demoted maverick radio announcer Grant Mazzy (Stephen McHattie) came
upon a scantily-clad, distraught (and demented) woman in the storm. At
the radio station (660), he worked with technical assistant/engineer
Laurel-Ann Drummond (Georgina Reilly) and cautious station manager/producer
Sydney Briar (Lisa Houle). During the radio show, helicopter reporter
Ken Loney (voice of Rick Roberts) described more disturbing and mysterious,
frenzied phenomena - a shoot-out had occurred between the province's
police and local ice-hut fishers who were screaming nonsense-words, nude,
and missing limbs. There was a
bloody scene at the local offices of Dr. Mendez (Hrant Alianak). An "infected"
individual was mumbling "Mommy" to himself with a young child's voice.
A rogue transmission of garbled French instructed them to remain indoors,
not use terms of endearment ("honey" or "sweetheart") and not use the
English language, among other things. The town - threatened by a contagious
and spreading outbreak (a vocal virus), was under quarantine, with military
vehicles and helicopters converging and setting up roadblocks and martial
law. The station was besieged by worried and terrified callers, and was
literally surrounded by hordes of people on the attack. A disoriented
Laurel-Anne appeared to be infected as she was speaking unintelligible
gibberish. Dr. Mendez arrived to seek refuge and to explain to Sydney
and Grant - locked in a sound-proof recording booth - the reason for
the chaos and carnage. A zombie-virus
was being spread by way of human language - the virus was hiding
in certain English words. Some words were infectious, and only certain
words infected certain users. Those who were fully infected became zombies
who attacked others to pass on the virus. Laurel-Anne was being taken
over by the virus, showing the first stage of infection by repeatedly
saying the word "missing" - and in more serious stages, she was stumbling
around and slamming her head against the booth's glass until it was bloodied.
Ken also called in again and appeared possessed, repeating the word "sample."
Dr. Mendez began to show signs of being taken over with the word "breathe,"
until he started speaking in Armenian. Sydney was dying with the word
"kill" - her symptoms disappeared however when Grant, who suspected how
to beat the virus, convinced her to repeat over and over again: "Kill
is kiss." Over the air, Grant and Sydney struggled to broadcast ways
to minimize the threat for their infected listeners, and avoid spreading
the virus with the words in their message. During and after the final
credits, it was reported that the quarantine had failed and the virus
was spreading.
Notable: A minimalist yet effective zombie movie, actually
a psychological thriller, almost entirely devoid of zombies - the
infected were called "conversationalists." Based on Tony Burgess'
novel Pontypool
Changes Everything, and created in the format of a radio play,
similar to Orson Welles' infamous 1938 broadcast of "The
War of the Worlds." |
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Quarantine (2008)
d. John Erick Dowdle, 89 minutes, Andale Pictures/Screen Gems/Vertigo
Entertainment
Tagline: "On March 11 2008, the government sealed
off an apartment complex in Los Angeles. The residents were never
seen again. No details. No witnesses. No evidence. Until now."
Setting: One evening, March 11, 2008, in Los Angeles, California
Story: Late-night TV reporter/host Angela Vidal (Jennifer
Carpenter) and her cameraman Scott Pervical (Steve Harris) accompanied
two firefighters, Jake (Jay Hernandez) and George Fletcher (Johnathon
Schaech) on an emergency 911 call to an apartment building. On the
scene, they met the building manager Yuri (Rade Serbedzija) and two
police officers already there: James (Andrew Fiscella) and Danny
(Columbus Short). An infected, foaming-at-the-mouth elderly Mrs.
Espinoza (Jeannie Epper) aggressively bit James, after which Fletcher
(also bitten in the face) fell down the stairwell and was seriously
injured. Danny was forced to kill the woman with three gunshots.
Shortly later, Fletcher resurrected himself and attacked the group,
but was sedated. The authorities were alerted by the CDC to quarantine
the building, trapping
everyone inside. The diagnosis was that a fast-moving virus, possibly
rabies according to vet Lawrence (Greg Germann), had transformed
those infected into bloodthirsty zombies, first carried by a sick
dog named Max. The dog was owned by five year old Briana (Joey King),
the feverishly ill daughter of apartment tenant Kathy (Marin Hinkle).
All communications were cut off, including phones, the Internet,
TV and cell phones. A second very sick elderly woman named Elise
(Stacy Chbosky) appeared rabid and hysterical, and was bashed in
the head and killed. Briana also became rabid and aggressive. As
time went on, the situation worsened as many of the infected (those
who were bitten) went on to attack others and also infect them. In
the attic-penthouse room rented by a Bostonian tenant (who was thought
to be absent), there were some caged animals. Evidence was found
by sole surviving Angela and Scott that the man was a member of a
doomsday cult that had stolen the Armageddon Virus from a military
facility. Suddenly, the emaciated, sick tenant (Doug Jones) emerged
and attacked the two remaining survivors (and
began eating Scott), as the film ended. The crew's videotape surfaced
as the only evidence of what had happened.
Notable: This sci-fi supernatural horror film, in the sub-genre
of hand-held "found footage," was a remake of [REC]
(2007, Sp.) (see earlier). It actually shed more light and
interest on the original film. A sequel followed, titled Quarantine
2: Terminal (2011).
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Zombie Strippers! (2008)
d. Jay Lee, 94 minutes, Stage 6 Films/Triumph
Films/Scream HQ/Sony Pictures Entertainment
Tagline: "They'll Dance For a Fee, But Devour
You For Free," and "Live Dead Nudes."
Setting: The year 2012 (the dystopic near-future), a strip
club in Sartre, Nebraska.
Story: The tale began in the year 2012 with a bit of political
satire: George Bush was in his 4th term as President. An
experimental chemical virus, secretly created in a science lab by Dr.
Chushfeld (Brad Milne), was designed to re-animate the dead tissue
of fallen soldiers and form an 'undead' army of super-soldiers (to
replenish lost troops in Iraq). The virus was accidentally released.
A detachment of soldiers (the elite Z Squad) was sent to the science
research lab to contain the virus and eliminate the zombies. The germs
infected Byrdflough (Zak Kilberg), one of the soldiers sent to eradicate
the laboratory zombies. The main starring character, performing
at Rhino's, an underground strip club in the conservative Midwest of
Sartre, Nebraska, was lead blonde stripper Kat (former XXX-porn star
Jenna Jameson). The club was managed by Ian Essko (Robert Englund -
Freddy Krueger from A
Nightmare on Elm Street!). Byrdflough ripped
out Kat's neck and infected
her - turning her and the rest of the pole-dancing zombie strippers
into fast-moving, superstrong, intelligent and hungry zombies. The
strippers would take clients backstage after amazing stage acts and
devour them ("I could just
eat you alive"). Kat's zombification
made her more alluring and desirable, leading to one of the film's
gore-erotic highlights - a zombie show-down/catfight between rival
Jeannie (Shamron Moore) and the decaying Kat. It featured a torn-off
arm, and ping pong balls propelled from Kat's vagina (advancing later
onto billiard balls) ("Prepare to die"). The film ended with
the conclusion that Bush's administration had deliberately released the
zombie plague to distract the American public from noticing the ineptitude
of Bush's terms in office.
Notable: This intriguing exploitation film headlined Jenna Jameson,
the former Penthouse Pet
who became an XXX-adult film star - it was her feature film debut. It
was a mindless, low-budget naked zombie film made by writer/director
Jay Lee. It was shot in only a few weeks and played in only 400 theatres
for one week before being directly released to DVD. The entire film was
a combo Showgirls
(1995) and Return of the Living Dead (1985). It was an allegorical
take-off on Eugene Ionesco's 1959 absurdist play Rhinoceros. There
were two similar films about strippers and zombies at about the same
time: Zombies!
Zombies! Zombies! (2008) (originally titled Strippers vs. Zombies)
and Big
Tits Zombie (2010, Jp.). |
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Dead Snow (2009, Norway) (aka
Død Snø)
d. Tommy Wirkola, 91 minutes, Yellow Bastard Productions/News on Request/Euforia
Tagline: "Ein! Zwei! Die!"
Setting: The Norwegian Alps near Øksfjord, Norway.
Story: During Easter vacation, eight oversexed, party-ready
medical students had planned a ski trip to the Norwegian Alps,
staying in a remote cabin, owned by one of the eight, Sara (Ane
Dahl Torp). There were four males: Martin (Vegar Hoel), Roy
(Stig Frode Henriksen), Vegard (Lasse Valdal) and horror movie
junkie Erlend (Jeppe Laursen) and four females: Hanna (Charlotte
Frogner), Liv (Evy Kasseth Røsten),
Chris (Jenny Skavlan) and Sara,
Vegard's girlfriend, who was late in arriving. (In the film's opening,
Sara had already been devoured after her head was severed, by
hungry soldiers in SS uniforms.) A wandering, strange
old hiker (Bjørn
Sundquist) told
the group about the local legend curse. During WWII for three
years, the brutal, sadistic and harsh Nazis had occupied the area,
raping, torturing and looting the locals. As the war was ending,
the locals revolted against the few surviving soldiers who fled
into the wilderness and were presumed to freeze to death. The students
were soon terrorized and attacked by a battalion of undead, hungry
German Nazi soldiers-zombies, led by iron-fisted Commander Colonel
Herzog (Ørjan Gamst). The Third Reich zombies believed that
a wooden box of gold valuables was hidden in the cabin - and they
came looking for it. The wandering hiker was the zombies' next
victim, followed by Chris, Erland, Liv (by suicide), Vegard, Hanna,
and Roy - in various scenes of slaughter, bitings, blood and gore
(intestines), and dismemberment. Martin was the final
survivor, facing off against Herzog.
Notable: A unique Nazi zombie movie - a low-budget, gory horror
comedy (and midnight-movie cult hit), followed by the sequel Dead
Snow 2: Red vs. Dead (2014, Norway). A similar film about Nazi
zombies was Shock Waves (1977). |
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The Horde (2009, Fr.) (aka La Horde)
d. Benjamin Rocher and Yannick Dahan, 96 minutes, Capture [The Flag]
Films/Le Pacte
Tagline: None
Setting: A corrupt and derelict suburban area of northern Paris,
France during a zombie apocalypse or plague
Story: In this gory, low-budget and violent zombie horror
film, a group of four corrupt, rogue Parisian policemen, led by
Ouessem (Jean-Pierre Martins), with Jimenez (Aurélien
Recoing),
Aurore (Claude Perron), and Tony
(Antoine Oppenheim), composed a vigilante death squad that had
been assembled to avenge the death of one of their colleagues,
detective Mathias Rivoallan. They sought to arrest (or capture/kill)
notorious, charismatic Nigerian drug dealer-kingpin Adewale Markudi
(Eriq Ebouaney), situated on the top floor of a mostly deserted,
concrete high-rise apartment building. It was a rundown tenement
for low-income working classes, with dilapidated stairways, labyrinthine
and winding corridors, and a dark basement. The operation failed
when the team was captured by Markudi's gang of malevolent criminals.
Both opposing groups found themselves fighting together against
the unexplained appearance of a horde of bloodthirsty, homicidal,
swift-moving, flesh-eating zombies ascending the structure, in
an effort to save themselves and escape from the building.
Notable: The zombie motif was used to comment upon the socio-political
conditions and the theme of civil unrest. |
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[REC] 2 (2009, Sp.)
d. Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza, 85 minutes, Filmax Entertainment/Magnet
Releasing/Magnolia Pictures
Tagline: "Fear Revisited."
Setting: Doomsday apocalyptic setting, in a Barcelona, Spain
apartment building.
Story: In the sequel to the original film, a quarantined tenement
building was the site of a bizarre outbreak of a demonic virus (carried
in blood and saliva). Four outfitted Special Operations agents (SWAT
team members) with helmet-mounted video cameras entered the Barcelona
apartment building that was sealed-off.
The group was directed by shady Ministry of Health official Dr. Owen
(Jonathan Mellor), who was searching for an antidote to the virus,
to prevent it from spreading. In the previous film, it was revealed
that crucifix-wielding Dr. Owen was actually a Vatican priest who had
been commissioned to get a blood sample from the emaciated, possessed
girl, Tristana Medeiros (Javier Botet) in the apartment's dark penthouse
to determine the reason for the outbreak. The Catholic Church was conducting
unholy experiments on the girl, to save the human race. Tristana was
now missing, and additional individuals had entered the apartment:
the father (Pep Molina) of the original virus carrier Jennifer (Claudia
Silva), and three teenagers: Tito (Pau Poch), Mire (Andrea Ros) and
Ori (Àlex
Batllori).
The trio of friends entered via the sewer system and became trapped
when their way out was sealed. A second video perspective was provided
by a camera held by Ori - it followed the action adding to the view
of Rosso's (Pablo Rosso) TV camera and the helmet cams. Zombies (ghouls
with hollow eyes and pale skin, who were also demonically-possessed)
were attacking and slaughtering various individuals. Everyone was lured
up to the penthouse, where the evil creature was unwittingly released.
In the twist ending, it soon took over and possessed Ángela
Vidal (Manuela Velasco), the TV show reporter from the first film.
She killed Dr. Owen and then, using his voice, authorized the release
of everyone from the building.
Notable: A splatter, shock-fest sequel to the original [REC]
(2007) with
a religious subtext (more demonic possession than zombification), similar
to The Exorcist (1973). It was followed by more sequels: [REC]
3: Genesis (2012), and [REC]
4: Apocalypse (2014). |
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Survival of the Dead (2009)
d. George Romero, 90 minutes, Blank of the Dead Productions/Devonshire
Productions/New Romero/ Sudden Storm Productions/Magnet Releasing
Tagline(s): "Survival Isn't Just For the
Living," and "Death isn't what it used to be."
Setting: Plum Island, off the coast of Delaware, an isolated
and rural island.
Story: The apocalyptic world was over-run by zombies: "The
last time anyone counted, 53 million people were dying every year,
a hundred-fifty thousand every day, a hundred and seven every minute,
and that was in normal times..." On a coastal Delaware island, two
families were ruled by opposing patriarchs: Captain Patrick O'Flynn
(Kenneth Welsh) and Seamus Muldoon (Richard Fitzpatrick). The O'Flynns
believed that resurrected, undead zombies should be shot, while the
Muldoons believed that zombies could be preserved and co-exist with
humans as part of the family, if taught to eat non-human flesh. In
another side story, National Guardsman Sarge "Nicotine" Crocket
(Alan Van Sprang) went AWOL with three other guardsmen, and began
holding up civilians. Patrick O'Flynn and family were forced at gunpoint
to leave the island. At Slaughter Island's ferry dock and marina,
a trap was set for Sarge and his men, who had been lured there.
Suddenly back on Plum Island with the returning O'Flynns, Sarge and
his men found themselves in the middle of a deadly feud between the
two Irish families. With dead zombies and clan members soon lying
everywhere, Sarge Crocket and his group decided to flee the island.
Ironically, Muldoon's theory about zombies being able to feast on
animals came true, but was unable to be communicated. In
the film's ending, zombified O'Flynn and Muldoon approached each
other from afar with guns in hand, endlessly feuding and attempting
to kill each other during a hillside duel - both guns clicked empty.
Notable: The sixth film in Romero's Dead series was,
in effect, a tangential sequel to the fifth film - and a major
box-office flop. The film's major theme was
whether zombies, cared for as loving kinfolk, could co-exist with
humans by learning to eat non-human flesh. The theme followed the
patriarchs of two families (the O'Flynns and Muldoons) who led a
deadly Hatfield-McCoy feud on an island over their differing views
on co-existence with zombies. It still presented
the thought-provoking idea that the human race might become zombified
if it continued to fight itself. |
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Zombieland (2009)
d. Ruben Fleischer, 88 minutes, Columbia
Pictures/Relativity Media
Tagline(s): "Nut up or shut up," and "Our
land is their land."
Setting: In the early 21st century, in a zombie-filled Southwestern
America (Texas and westward) after a zombie apocalypse; also Los Angeles
(Hollywood).
Story: Four uninfected individuals (with the names of cities)
eventually joined together for an extended cross-country journey, during
a time when a zombie virus-plague (related to mad-cow disease) had
spread across the Earth. They were: (1) phobic, cowardly Univ. of Texas
student
"Columbus" (Jesse Eisenberg) from Ohio, (2) Twinkie-loving,
zombie-shooting cowboy
"Tallahassee" (Woody Harrelson) on his way to Florida, (3-4)
teenaged sisters "Wichita" (Emma Stone) and "Little
Rock" (Abigail Breslin). At
first, the two sisters (clever con-artists) stole Tallahassee's Escalade,
as he and Columbus were driving through Texas, but then they reunited
and traveled together to Los Angeles. There, with a Hollywood map
to the stars' homes, they met up with Ghostbusters star
Bill Murray (cameo), who was shot and mistakenly killed while wearing
fake zombie makeup. Tallahassee and Columbus saved the two girls when
they split up and visited the "Pacific Playland" amusement
park, and attracting zombies to the lights and rides. The group of
four realized that they had become an unlikely, bonded family.
Notable: A big-budget successful zombie comedy, originally
planned as the pilot for a TV series. After the script was upgraded
and revised for the big screen, it was shot in 45 days. When released,
it was the highest-grossing zombie film of all time (at $75.6 million-
domestic), surpassing Dawn of the Dead's (2004) domestic total
of $59 million. Both were surpassed by World
War Z (2013), with $202.4 million (domestic).
With a well-known list of "rules
of survival" in
a zombie-filled world, and fresh and creative ways to kill zombies
(including
"Zombie Kills of the Week"). With an unexpected cameo by
Bill Murray. |
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