First rule of Horrorthon is: watch horror movies. Second rule of Horrorthon is: write about it. Warn us. Tempt us. The one who watches the most movies in 31 days wins. There is no prize.
Monday, October 04, 2010
Survival of the Dead
(2009) **1/2
A tangential sequel to Diary of the Dead, Survival of the Dead follows one of Diary’s minor characters, maverick soldier Alan Van Sprang, as he hits the road with a group of ruffians with the goal of reaching an island, reportedly a safe haven from the growing zombie outbreak. Along the way Sprang and his Merry Men encounter occasional zombies, which they easily take out with their large compliment of heavy artillery. After several setbacks the group eventually lands on the idyllic island where they encounter two long-feuding families who have differing ideas on how to handle the “dead”. One family wants to eliminate the zombie scourge from the island altogether while the other family reasons that since most of the zombies are family members they should be contained until a cure for the zombie threat is discovered. As the two clans square off on opposite sides of the island the real threat is ready to take over as cages are opened and shackles are unlocked.
I haven’t made it a secret that I’ve been disappointed in Romero’s new zombie trilogy and after watching Survival of the Dead I have finally been able to identify reasons for my displeasure. First, it’s just obvious that Romero doesn’t have the budget to properly realize a larger vision. In Dawn of the Dead (1978), we were provided with constant reminders about the scope of the zombie menace. In his latest films we are only given small encounters with zombies with little regard as to what is happening to the rest of the world. With a larger budget I would have fully expected Romero’s zombie series to begin addressing the zombie takeover as a worldwide event. What is happening in Europe, for example? How do cannibals handle the zombie thing? What does Arlington National Cemetery look like? What about the space station? What’s happening on the Love Boat? etc. In Romero’s film series the opposite occurs. We go from the global implications of the zombie take-over as presented in Dawn of the Dead to a few zombies on a small island.
Secondly, Romero’s original trilogy presented shocking violence as a means for social commentary. Any “commentary” in his recent films appears to be crowbarred in as a justification for the real reason today’s audiences watch his films, the gore. There are some hints of “family values” and religious indoctrination as “commentary” but by the end of the film you will be asking yourself, just what the hell is Romero trying to “say”? It should be noted that Romero does not disappoint with the gore – no one else does a bullet to the head shot better. There are numerous shootings, stabbings, burnings, etc, that we have come to expect from Romero, but he really does not add anything new save a brief scene involving decapitated heads on stakes.
If you are not familiar with Romero's dead cannon you might enjoy Survival of the Dead for what it is; a serviceable direct-to-video zombie flick with marginal amounts of gore and very little to say. I think it is depressing that the latter part of Romero’s career pales in comparison to his early stuff – and what is with those big-ass, DCD glasses?
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9 comments:
Ha-Ha. I'm going to take on some zombie flicks this year I think. Seriously - I am going to watch some movies this year!
Did anyone else read World War Z? That book had the kind of scope I think you're talking about, JPX. I really liked it.
And put it in your queue for 2012 - it's being directed by the guy who did Quantum of Solace. Brad Pitt is also in it, so you know they've got the budget. Innnnnnteresting.
nice write-up, jpx! i tend to avoid mediocre zombie movies like this; i prefer 'em either really bad or really good.
and dcd, we have your copy of world war z! jon and i both loved it but we need to get it back to you. didn't know they were planning a movie, psyched!
I haven't watched any of the recent Romero zombie flicks. It just doesn't excite me enough and now I see why.
And before you say it, JPX, I'm going to change my avatar.
Scary avatars for all!
Too bad about diminishing returns on Romero zombie movies. Even that phrase is depressing.
Can't say I'm too fond of this movie's title. If there's one group whose survival I can't be bothered about, it's dead people.
Great review JPX but "What’s happening on the Love Boat?" I'm beginning to get concerned with all your Love Boat references. I think you need to watch the entire series to get it out of your system. (Playing the theme song in my head now thank you very much!)
DCD ~ Tony read World War Z and loved it. Have you also read the Zombie Survival Guide? Did you know they were written by Mel Brooks' son?
i don't know if "too small" is precisely ever the issue with stuff that has large implications, but it's definite that if you're trying to tell a story with global implications and you're using a small story to tell it, you have to be very creative in how you get the globalness across.
and the creativity has to be there in two ways -- it has to evoke bigness, and it has to do so without it being really obvious that it's trying to evoke bigness *because* it's low budget.
i just watched a flick called the Children last night and one of the things i want to touch on in my review it also has the problem of "how do you show _____ when you've only got ______ to work with?"
except instead of bigness/smallness it's scary/little kids whose parents will sue you if their kids grow up maladjusted.
which reminds me -- another bit of Shining trivia. the parents of the kid who played danny torrance would only allow kubrick to cast their kid on the promise that the kid would never know he was in a horror movie.
the whole time, the kid thought he was in a comedy.
octo- i can't for the life of me find a horrorthon-appropriate bubbles avatar. maybe mr. ac can create one for me, or maybe i just have to abandon bubbles for the rest of the month.
fitty- i'm loving "the shining" trivia! good stuff.
my bad -- the kid thought he was in a drama, not a comedy
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