I'm not
a big zombie movie fan, but this film is so worth checking out in my opinion.
Not exact matches
It was on a trio of serials that Brannon directed by himself — King of the Rocket Men (1949), Radar Men From the Moon (1952), and
Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952)-- that he made his
biggest mark on
movies, however.
Since then, the
zombie movie has been a staple at the cinema and at home, with offerings ranging from the totally»80s classic Night of the Comet to the
biggest box office
zombie flick yet, World War Z. Because there are only so many ways to serve up brains, and with TV's The Walking Dead doing an excellent job of that on a regular basis, filmmakers are taking unique approaches to
zombies and treating them as characters, not just mindless threats.
I think because we're not a straight horror
movie or a
zombie movie, and we've had this sci - fi thriller edge, it has allowed us to play so
big outside of North America.
More
zombie movies, games, and TV shows come out every year and there's even a growing zomromcom genre which is
bigger than you think.
But unlike
zombie movies where the human condition plays a
big role, the emphasis in Rise of the Planet of the Apes is Caesar.
World War Z is the first
big blockbuster size
zombie movie.
I was never a
big fan of
zombie movies beyond Romero's NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.
It's unfortunate that a
movie so smartly written manages to still fall back on the
biggest zombie flick cliche of all, undermining all of that build up and subtext.
You can practically hear the
movie spinning up...
zombie movies do not have
big casts and until Resident Evil gets itself manageable, it doesn't really get going.
Like characters in one of those
zombie movies where no one says «
zombie,» the crew of the Cloverfield space station — a
big metal psilocybin mushroom orbiting near - future Earth — doesn't know what it's in for, having left our planet without ever having seen a single sci - fi horror
movie: not Alien, not Event Horizon, and...
Like characters in one of those
zombie movies where no one says «
zombie,» the crew of the Cloverfield space station — a
big metal psilocybin mushroom orbiting near - future Earth — doesn't know what it's in for, having left our planet without ever having seen a single sci - fi horror
movie: not Alien, not Event Horizon, and definitely nothing about science gone wrong.
With World War Z, however, we get a budget of $ 190 million dedicated to bringing us the largest scale
zombie movie to ever grace the
big screen.
The already successful
zombie apocalypse survival game is already a
big hit, has a
movie deal in place,... Read More