Planet Terror is a 2007
American zombie film directed by Robert Rodriguez.
Not exact matches
The
film's African
American hero survives the night but is mistaken for a
zombie and shot dead the next morning.
In a real sense, it's a
film about perceptual reality, and as the plague inevitably breaks out again in an
American - run, Ellis Island-esque NATO outpost, Fresnadillo's escalation of the events from an observation room to a subway tunnel to an open air carnival (with a brief stop in - between for an
American helicopter to one - up Robert Rodriguez amidst a horde of
zombies) demonstrates a firm handle on how to intersperse God's - eye perspective with impossible - to - assimilate ground - level chaos.
Entertainment One
Films US has acquired North
American distribution rights to two
films: horror thriller The Hunted and
zombie comedy April Apocalypse, pictured above, Bloody Disgusting learned.
As he commented, «if you've ever had anonymous sex in a park or even in a bathhouse, basically it is like having sex with a
zombie, and not necessarily in a bad way... having sex with them frees you from the personal and emotional restraints of normal sexual behaviour».65
American scholar Shaka McGlotten echoes this sentiment when he suggests that the «collective zombification» of «contemporary queer sociality» as represented in LaBruce's
zombie films, possesses a creativity and «openness» from which «enlivening modes of agency» can be at the very «least» imagined if not cultivated.66 In symbolising the «return of the repressed» LaBruce's
zombies evoke the idealised polymorphous body of sexual liberation.
A paying audience's craving for this
film's message would suggest that many
Americans are not yet brain - dead doomsday
zombies.