There's been
a lot of zombie films in recent years, so it's with some trepidation Continue reading Shaun of the Dead →
There's been
a lot of zombie films in recent years, so it's with some trepidation that I sit down to watch another one.
Not exact matches
Again many questions are raised but the tale is the most interesting and could easily be expanded, its basically your common
zombie apocalypse type flick that obviously has
lots of similarities with the 1960
film «Village
of the Damned».
I hoped to continue this winning run with the South Korean
zombie film Train to Busan, which has been gathering a
lot of acclaim from critics and horror fans alike.
Though Eisenberg's excessive voiceover narration bogs down the first act, the
film quickly evolves into a crackling
zombie romp powered by a clever script, goofy physical comedy — the filmmakers get a
lot of mileage out
of Harrelson's amusingly over-the-top means
of dispatching the undead — and the yin - yang comic chemistry
of the eternally adorable Eisenberg and good - ol» - boy Harrelson.
We glimpsed a
zombie horde chasing our protagonists through a parking
lot as well as the facade
of a strip club featured in the
film called «Lawrence
of Alabia»... the combination
of which is perhaps the only thing you need to now about the
film's tone (which you can glimpse more
of in the
film's trailer).
As most
zombie films go, a
lot rides on how the movie displays the chaos and destruction, and that is one
of the coolest things about this
film.