FILM:
The American President. He (or she, just hang on) is committed to protecting the nation from all enemies foreign, domestic or supernatural, right? We are assured that the Pentagon has considered plans for a Zombie Apocalypse, but if the movies are to be believed (and why wouldn't they be?) this is not the first time that the President has had to deal with the Undead Un-American Activities. Many of our greatest presidents have faced down some of our most classic monsters already, and they did not shirk their responsibilities.
What with the internet being the hotbed for "This + That" nerdistry and wannamemes that it is, there are as many spawns of this idea as a hot bed is wont to bring forth, especially with zombies. There is zombie every-damn-thing on the internet. Go on, think of a word, add zombie to it and Google. Yup, there it is. Zombie Pool, both billiards and swimming. Zombie Ice Cream. Zombie Pope. As such, I'm not addressing every damn variation on this theme, but simply hitting some of the bigger cinematic moments in American Presidents versus Classic Monsters. Fanfic (and there's puh-lenty) need not apply.
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter - 2012
Abraham Lincoln vs Vampires
I was surprised to discover that this was a June release, because it has the key ingredients of a May movie; specifically traditional monsters, a forgettable story, B-list effects and double cheese. That's not to say that it's bad, mind you. I often have more fun with May movies than I do with, say, the July ones. They're frequently more fun, and AL:VH is certainly that.
The film doesn't so much posit an alternate timeline as a secret history. Lincoln, in his youth, had a run in with some pretty vicious vampires, which led him to a night job as a slayer of the undead while he pursued his legal and political career by day. He trains with a mentor hunter in the finer points of axe-handling, which you just know is gonna end poorly for the mentor yet motivationally for Honest Abe. This comes in handy, since there is a much larger vampire threat with endangers the future of American freedom... or something.
The movie makes more than a token effort to fit the vampires in around the events of Lincoln's life. Sure, whenever you shake a tree like this, four score and seven history nerds fall out to tell why nuh-uh, but for a movie that tell you in its title that it gives not one shit about such fussbudgets, it's more faithful than it needs to be.
The action is slick and cool. Lincoln is a reluctant badass, much as history holds him to be... plus, you know, the axe. Lincoln wields it like a kung fu artist and it provides a unique visual profile to what might otherwise have been some pretty rote violence. The not-terribly-memorable villain is played by an Englishman, because ALL the villains are played by Englishmen nowadays. The narrative takes itself seriously internally, but it is fully aware that you won't.
Really, the weakest thing about it is that I've seen it twice and I still don't remember the full core story. I think that's probably because it was pulled along more by the chronology of Lincoln's life (lives being less tightly structured than stories) rather than by A-to-B narrative tropes.
It's good mindless fun that won't fill you up or weigh you down.
FDR: American Badass! - 2012
Franklin Roosevelt vs Werewolves
This movie has every excuse to be terrible, and there's certainly no denying the bargain basement production values, but despite all the obvious shortcomings, it's really rather funny thanks to its script and performers. I can only assume it was conceived as a low-budget satire on the idea of Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, being released straight-to-video within months of the bigger-budgeted film. Where Lincoln takes itself remarkably seriously, FDR takes absolutely NOTHING seriously, and that is its trump card.
As a younger man, Franklin Roosevelt was good at everything and so beloved by everyone that his massive ego was merely another beloved characteristic. And then he was attacked by a werewolf, and werewolf bites cause polio, dontcha know? In a sight gag that will recur throughout the movie, FDR's legs are reduced to wildly quivering children's legs. That sets the "story" into motion, and establishes the level and premise for much of the movie's humor. As FDR, Barry "Brad" Bostwick is an over-the-top caricature of the manly man of bygone days. He drinks hard, he laughs hard at his own jokes, and he's predominantly concerned with how the polio will affect his "cack." After the werewolf attack, he's more determined than ever to become President.
Little does he know at the time, but the werewolf was a German agent. It seems that all the Axis powers are werewolves, and werewolves Hitler, Hirohito and Mussolini chat with each other on the phone like teenage girls while making their plans for world conquest. Fortunately, FDR is a take-charge kind of leader, and takes point on the D-day invasion with his armored and machine gun-enabled wheelchair.
In case I've been too subtle, this is not a delicate comedy of manners. It's crude in as many ways as possible, but there's an ounce of brain under the hood of it all, as opposed to, say, just another Wayans movie. My personal favorite joke comes from a left-field cribbing of Bon Jovi lyrics in a campaign meeting FDR has with a struggling constituent. Some people will be put off by some of the humor which comes across as racist or sexist, but there are enough instances that expose enough awareness to suggest that what they are really mocking is not races and sexes, but racists and sexists.
For a movie that didn't need to accomplish much to attain "so bad it's good" low-low-budget and expectations status, it really seemed to me that FDR: American Badass! delivered more than it needed to, and much more cleverly than is likely to be appreciated.
Bubba Ho-Tep - 2002
John F Kennedy vs a Mummy
Bruce Campbell is a sad old man in a nursing home. He drifts in and out of awareness, and isn't sure he cares. He also may or may not be Elvis.
Ossie Davis is his best friend in the nursing home. He also may or may not be JFK.
Together they become aware of an entity that haunts the nursing home by night, sucking the life energy out of the home's defenseless residents. He definitely IS an Egyptian mummy!
Jack and Elvis have to push themselves to their limits to confront the mummy and free the souls of their friends. While it takes the obvious guise of a monster movie, much of what makes Bubba Ho-Tep so good is the way it uses these recontextualized horror tropes to consider issues of age, ability and respect. The majority of monster movies are about impulsive young people who don't think about what they're doing. Jack and Elvis aren't like that. They don't run screaming like a bunch of ninnies. They face their enemy fully accepting that they will likely die. It's not about survival for them. They're past that point. It's about being useful, having value, and dedicating their lives to doing something with meaning. They continue to EARN respect, even if no one gives it to them anymore.
Must-see if you appreciate the way that Bruce Campbell can turn just about any line into something hilarious and cool. Easily one of the best mummy movies ever, which isn't really saying that much.
See also: JFK vs zombies in Call of Duty: Black Ops.
Mars Attacks! - 1996
The President vs Martians
Yeah, you could just as easily put Independence Day in this slot, but Mars Attacks! is the better movie by far. They're essentially the same movie, but ID takes itself completely seriously, which makes it all the more ridiculous. Mars Attacks! however, is based on a fan favorite trading card series from the 1960s and takes very little seriously. ID wants you to care about the outcome. MA! gives you credit for already knowing that the human have to win in the end, so it doesn't really matter if it's a silly victory. That approach is woven throughout the movie. ID teases you with its aliens and insists that they're badass and scary even after it's been revealed that they're cheesy and dopey. MA!'s aliens fully embrace their anachronistic origins and simply play their required role. This all frees up MA! to be more creative and fun while essentially doing the same things.
It's an ensemble cast, and just happens to include Jack Nicholson in two roles, one of whom is the President. While one might initially question the judgment of casting Nicholson in two roles when he is always so clearly Nicholson, Mars Attacks! reminds you that it couldn't possibly matter. The film is full of recognizable faces and at no point does it matter if they embody the role with transcendent gravitas. It's more like an episode of the Love Boat. It's just fun to have them there because they're them, and them being them is a convenient shorthand to who they're playing. There's no extra exposition required, which again, frees up MA! to be the silly fun that it is.
Nicholson's President oozes with transparent people-pleasing charm. His triteness is summed up with the go-to refrain for late 20th century naivete, "Can't we all just... get along?" shortly before he learned the hard way that the Martians have not come all this way to... get along.
See also: President Colbert vs aliens in Monsters vs. Aliens
Death Race 2000 - 1975
"Frankenstein" vs the President
Death Race 2000 is one of that select class of 70s exploitation films that manages to have it both ways. It's a brutal satire that gets away with just being brutal if that's the way you watch it. The premise presages the like of The Running Man, The Hunger Games or CBS's Survivor, where a cross-country race in which hapless victims of automotive homicide are scored for points, all of this in a bread-and-circuses effort to distract from the corruption of the government. The racers are all over-the-top personalities a la Hanna Barbera's Wacky Races, professional fake wrestling or "Real" "Housewives."
Under the surface of all these goings-on there's the political machinations of the president, and the underground movement to overthrow him. One of the most successful racers, Frankenstein played by David Carradine, is sympathetic to the cause. He's seen and been the worst of the best and the best of the worst.
In the interest of full disclosure, Frankenstein is not a Frankenstein's monster. He's just a man who survived a disfiguring accident and earned the moniker for his appearance. Nevertheless, it was too golden an opportunity to round out the roster of classic monsters faced by presidents.
Death Race 2000 was a midnight movie classic that has now attained the status of just plain classic. The satire is still bitingly timely, which says a whole lot of bad things about the ground we've covered in the past 40 years.
Obama vs Zombie image from the internet, no rights or credit claimed
Showing posts with label zombies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zombies. Show all posts
The 10 Best Zombie Movies (for People Who Don't Necessarily Like Zombie Movies)
I'm not even going to dance around it. The fact is, I have not been a lifetime horror fan. As it turns out, there have been quite a few that I've liked along the way, but they seldom made me want to get deeper into the genre. On top of that, I've been even less interested in zombie movies. Until recently, they've predominantly been products of the lowest production values and the sparest creativity. Gore for the sake of gore is rather a bore.
So what business do I have making a list of "Best Zombie Movies" anyway? Well, if you're a hardcore zombie junkie, you don't need this. You'll watch anything and you already know what you like. I'm not approaching this as a zombie fan, but as a film fan, so my picks won't necessarily reflect the priorities of the hardcore fans. The biggest example of this is the exclusion of George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. While it's considered THE seminal zombie movie and (to be fair) pretty much established the sub-genre by itself, I just didn't LIKE it, and I found all the praise of its subtext to be vastly overstated. It does, however, set the pattern upon which future zombie movies would expand. In short: the newly dead rise from the grave and eat the living. Fleeing strangers seek refuge. They're gradually picked off either by zombies or their own paranoia. One or two might survive, but chances are they'll get killed anyway. Much as with punk rock, The Sex Pistols may have been the founders, but The Clash were the masters. Deal with that. Bring on the masters...
28 Days Later... - 2002
Written by Alex Garland
Directed by Danny Boyle
The Gold Standard for modern zombie movies. While not strictly the first movie to feature "fast-movers," it was the one that popularized them. They certainly enhance the sense of threat, but 28 Days doesn't make them the focus. It, like many of the best ones, places the emphasis on how humans manage to survive each other in the presence of such a sudden and soul-jarring disaster. It's interesting to me that, in the absence of hot-and-cold-running firearms in England, the story so strongly centers on protecting humanity in more ways than the physical. Also that "Rage" is the super-contagion creating mindless killing machines.
Warm Bodies - 2013
Written by Jonathan Levine from the
Book by Isaac Marion
Directed by Jonathan Levine
Now this is something different. Told from the perspective of a teenaged zombie who is surprised to discover that he has a perspective. He develops thoughts and feelings, particularly concerning a living young woman. They team up, realizing that there might be more to the whole zombie thing than eating brains or being target practice (respectively), and that realization threatens the stability of both their worlds. It's funny. It's sweet. It's everything that hardcore zombie fans hate. It dares... to have hope. (gasp) *choke* My only complaint is that the "Bonies," zombies who've lost all hope and become dessicated, skeletal corpses, run faster than both the regular zombies and the humans, which just makes no sense whatsoever from a biological standpoint. Being little more than skeletons, they don't have the muscles to run fast. They do play an important role as the ultimate threat, so I guess there's that.
Open Grave - 2013
Written by Chris & Eddie Borey
Directed by Gonzalo Lopez-Gallego
I sort of hate to include this one here because it's much better if you go into it not knowing that there are zombies, and you definitely should not expect it to be a "Zombie Movie." On the other hand, you're unlikely to see this film without having it recommended, and it deserves to be seen. A man awakens in a pit full of dead bodies with no idea who he is or how he got there. He finds his way to a nearby house where a group of people is similarly afflicted. Trust is in even shorter supply than answers. In addition to setting up a tremendous mystery/thriller, when it does reveal its "Z" connection, its an aspect of such stories that we have rarely, if ever, seen addressed before.
The Battery - 2012
Written & Directed by Jeremy Gardner
This little indie places the focus squarely on survival. Two former baseball teammates have stuck together ever since the outbreak, and over time it becomes clear that it's less out of any particular bond between them, and more a matter of just not wanting to be alone, and really not having any better ideas than going on. In an unusual character twist for a z-flick, Mickey refuses to kill zombies, and doesn't show much of an instinct for survival at all. Ben continues to carry him, and it helps that the zombies are old-school brain-dead slow-movers. After so long together, it's clear that they're reaching the end of their ropes. Mickey escapes into his headphones as much as possible, and Ben is starting to take a little too much glee in the zombie-slaying. When they intercept a radio transmission from a xenophobic stronghold of survivors, Mickey becomes even more dangerous to their team as he tries to establish contact with the woman on the radio. This is a quieter piece which nevertheless builds the tension as bad choices and bad luck collide.
Dawn of the Dead - 1978
Written & Directed by George Romero
I may not care for Romero's foundational Night of the Living Dead, but as disappointing as I found that one, I thought the next one, Dawn of the Dead, delivered. Here, the social satire is on full display as four survivors take refuge atop a shopping mall where the zombies still stroll because it's all they can remember how to do. With swarms of slow-walkers, the threat is much better represented than in the first, and the threat of other humans is considerably ramped up as well. The humor is abundant, and the characters are actually likeable. Anyone seeking a foundational zombie movie would get everything they needed here. Romero's Dawn of the Dead is so seminal that the Dead Rising video game is basically a direct riff on it. Also, there's...
Dawn of the Dead - 2004
Written by James Gunn from the original by George Romero
Directed by Zack Snyder
Given that Snyder's films tend to be visually impressive, but ultimately dead things anyway, it's unsurprising that this is in many ways his least disappointing film. In fact, it's the humanity shown that makes this a worthwhile (if much less brilliant) remake. This time, a larger group of survivors affords more opportunities for interpersonal drama... and loss. While there was a pregnancy in Romero's Dawn, Snyder's sees it through to its unholy conclusion in the film's most unforgettable scene. This Dawn served as an effective, uncomplicated base for the new zombie trend that was to follow. I'm not saying it sparked it, but it provided a handy return to basics.
Shaun of the Dead - 2004
Written by Simon Pegg & Edgar Wright
Directed by Edgar Wright
Now this is one of the films that helped spark it (along with 28 Days Later). Zombie movies seem particularly well-suited to comedy for some reason. Perhaps it's the inherent absurdity or the opportunities for extreme behavior. Maybe it's just whistling past the graveyard. Notice the homage to Dawn of the Dead in the title. Pegg & Wright's Shaun uses the zombies as metaphor for the dead end that not-quite-so-young-anymore Shaun has reached in his life due to his unwillingness to wake up and smell the choices. Filled with quotable lines, Shaun of the Dead launched the international careers of Pegg, Wright and Nick Frost.
Zombieland - 2009
Written by Rhett Reese & Paul Wernick
Directed by Ruben Fleischer
Speaking of how zombies are well-suited to comedy, Zombieland definitely favors the comedy side of the family. Good ol' boy Woody Harrelson joins a particularly twitchy Jesse Eisenberg on a cross-country trek post outbreak. They run into Emma Stone and Abigail Breslin as another duo of survivors. Neither duo wants to trust the other, but they just might need each other. The rules of Zombie Survival are discussed, Twinkies are the ultimate food in post-civilzation America, and Bill Murray steals the show, appearing as... Bill Murray.
The Cabin in the Woods - 2012
Written by Joss Whedon & Drew Goddard
Directed by Drew Goddard
Okay, this barely qualifies as a zombie movie, but there ARE zombies, and it IS a great movie. As has happened time and again in ages past, five young people go to a remote cabin and unleash a terrible evil. The evil they happen to unleash in this case is an inbred frontier family of living deadness. The blood begins to flow... but there's more going on here than meets the dangling eyeball. Though frequently overlooked as such, this is a fully qualified entry in the greater Whedon family of quality entertainments.
ParaNorman - 2012
Written by Chris Butler
Directed by Chris Butler & Sam Fell
Norman Babcock is like a lot of kids his age. He's fascinated with monster movies; zombies in particular. Norman is NOT like a lot of kids. Norman sees dead people. Everywhere. All the time. This tends not to endear him to his classmates at school, and frustrates the hell out of his family. When his crazy uncle dies, it falls to Norman to perform the ritual that will protect his town from the curse of a colonial era witch or the dead will walk again.
Norman does not perform the ritual.
Mayhem ensues, and everyone has a lesson or two coming their way. ParaNorman is a funny and touching work of stop-motion animation from Laika, the studio behind Coraline and The Box Trolls.
Honorable Mentions:
Maybe not great films, but ones that offer something fresh or interesting to the zombie library.
Deadgirl - 2008
Written by Trent Haaga
Directed by Marcel Sarmiento & Gadi Harel
I almost forgot this one because it's so unsettling. A couple of teenage boys explore a long-since abandoned asylum, discovering a locked door buried behind a hallway crammed full of old equipment and refuse. Behind the door, they find the body of a girl in much better condition than her surroundings. To their surprise, she's not exactly dead... but not exactly alive either. What follows is, shall we say, some of the poorer behavior of which opportunistic teenage boys are capable. The tension and fear at work in Deadgirl hinge primarily on human behavior. Their secret discovery builds conflict between them, and the tinder of conflict grows until something has to ignite it. While relatively light on the gore, Deadgirl is probably the most genuinely horrific film on this entire list.
Dance of the Dead - 2008
Written by Joe Ballarini
Directed by Gregg Bishop
A zombie plague strikes on the night of the senior prom and it falls to the schools dateless misfits to rescue their classmates, or at least achieve a little cathartic release on what remains. A fun, funny high school flick with lots of head-smashy goodness.
28 Weeks Later - 2007
Written by [see link for writing team]
Directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
This loosely related sequel to 28 Days Later is in nowhere near the same class as the original, but taken on its own terms, it does tell a unique story. It's a more traditional zombie movie with the hook being that it focuses on the members of a single family and their recurring bouts of terror as England experiences the cleansing, and recurrence of the "Rage Virus."
World War Z - 2013
Written by [see link for writing team]
Directed by Marc Forster
WWZ is rumored to have had a troubled production, and it shows. While possessing many flaws, the fact remains that WWZ is a high-budget mad spectacle, and for that alone, it's worth a viewing. Granted, some of this spectacle also qualifies as flaws -- such as ridiculously fast-moving zombies forming a giant mound to reach the top of a stories-high protective wall which should be beyond both zombie logic and basic physics, but it's undeniably freaky and cool nevertheless. It also follows the efforts to sort out the cause and develop a cure, which is an aspect that we rarely get to see.
This list is subject to change pending further viewing.
So what business do I have making a list of "Best Zombie Movies" anyway? Well, if you're a hardcore zombie junkie, you don't need this. You'll watch anything and you already know what you like. I'm not approaching this as a zombie fan, but as a film fan, so my picks won't necessarily reflect the priorities of the hardcore fans. The biggest example of this is the exclusion of George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. While it's considered THE seminal zombie movie and (to be fair) pretty much established the sub-genre by itself, I just didn't LIKE it, and I found all the praise of its subtext to be vastly overstated. It does, however, set the pattern upon which future zombie movies would expand. In short: the newly dead rise from the grave and eat the living. Fleeing strangers seek refuge. They're gradually picked off either by zombies or their own paranoia. One or two might survive, but chances are they'll get killed anyway. Much as with punk rock, The Sex Pistols may have been the founders, but The Clash were the masters. Deal with that. Bring on the masters...
28 Days Later... - 2002
Written by Alex Garland
Directed by Danny Boyle
The Gold Standard for modern zombie movies. While not strictly the first movie to feature "fast-movers," it was the one that popularized them. They certainly enhance the sense of threat, but 28 Days doesn't make them the focus. It, like many of the best ones, places the emphasis on how humans manage to survive each other in the presence of such a sudden and soul-jarring disaster. It's interesting to me that, in the absence of hot-and-cold-running firearms in England, the story so strongly centers on protecting humanity in more ways than the physical. Also that "Rage" is the super-contagion creating mindless killing machines.
Warm Bodies - 2013
Written by Jonathan Levine from the
Book by Isaac Marion
Directed by Jonathan Levine
Now this is something different. Told from the perspective of a teenaged zombie who is surprised to discover that he has a perspective. He develops thoughts and feelings, particularly concerning a living young woman. They team up, realizing that there might be more to the whole zombie thing than eating brains or being target practice (respectively), and that realization threatens the stability of both their worlds. It's funny. It's sweet. It's everything that hardcore zombie fans hate. It dares... to have hope. (gasp) *choke* My only complaint is that the "Bonies," zombies who've lost all hope and become dessicated, skeletal corpses, run faster than both the regular zombies and the humans, which just makes no sense whatsoever from a biological standpoint. Being little more than skeletons, they don't have the muscles to run fast. They do play an important role as the ultimate threat, so I guess there's that.
Open Grave - 2013
Written by Chris & Eddie Borey
Directed by Gonzalo Lopez-Gallego
I sort of hate to include this one here because it's much better if you go into it not knowing that there are zombies, and you definitely should not expect it to be a "Zombie Movie." On the other hand, you're unlikely to see this film without having it recommended, and it deserves to be seen. A man awakens in a pit full of dead bodies with no idea who he is or how he got there. He finds his way to a nearby house where a group of people is similarly afflicted. Trust is in even shorter supply than answers. In addition to setting up a tremendous mystery/thriller, when it does reveal its "Z" connection, its an aspect of such stories that we have rarely, if ever, seen addressed before.
The Battery - 2012
Written & Directed by Jeremy Gardner
This little indie places the focus squarely on survival. Two former baseball teammates have stuck together ever since the outbreak, and over time it becomes clear that it's less out of any particular bond between them, and more a matter of just not wanting to be alone, and really not having any better ideas than going on. In an unusual character twist for a z-flick, Mickey refuses to kill zombies, and doesn't show much of an instinct for survival at all. Ben continues to carry him, and it helps that the zombies are old-school brain-dead slow-movers. After so long together, it's clear that they're reaching the end of their ropes. Mickey escapes into his headphones as much as possible, and Ben is starting to take a little too much glee in the zombie-slaying. When they intercept a radio transmission from a xenophobic stronghold of survivors, Mickey becomes even more dangerous to their team as he tries to establish contact with the woman on the radio. This is a quieter piece which nevertheless builds the tension as bad choices and bad luck collide.
Dawn of the Dead - 1978
Written & Directed by George Romero
I may not care for Romero's foundational Night of the Living Dead, but as disappointing as I found that one, I thought the next one, Dawn of the Dead, delivered. Here, the social satire is on full display as four survivors take refuge atop a shopping mall where the zombies still stroll because it's all they can remember how to do. With swarms of slow-walkers, the threat is much better represented than in the first, and the threat of other humans is considerably ramped up as well. The humor is abundant, and the characters are actually likeable. Anyone seeking a foundational zombie movie would get everything they needed here. Romero's Dawn of the Dead is so seminal that the Dead Rising video game is basically a direct riff on it. Also, there's...
Dawn of the Dead - 2004
Written by James Gunn from the original by George Romero
Directed by Zack Snyder
Given that Snyder's films tend to be visually impressive, but ultimately dead things anyway, it's unsurprising that this is in many ways his least disappointing film. In fact, it's the humanity shown that makes this a worthwhile (if much less brilliant) remake. This time, a larger group of survivors affords more opportunities for interpersonal drama... and loss. While there was a pregnancy in Romero's Dawn, Snyder's sees it through to its unholy conclusion in the film's most unforgettable scene. This Dawn served as an effective, uncomplicated base for the new zombie trend that was to follow. I'm not saying it sparked it, but it provided a handy return to basics.
Shaun of the Dead - 2004
Written by Simon Pegg & Edgar Wright
Directed by Edgar Wright
Now this is one of the films that helped spark it (along with 28 Days Later). Zombie movies seem particularly well-suited to comedy for some reason. Perhaps it's the inherent absurdity or the opportunities for extreme behavior. Maybe it's just whistling past the graveyard. Notice the homage to Dawn of the Dead in the title. Pegg & Wright's Shaun uses the zombies as metaphor for the dead end that not-quite-so-young-anymore Shaun has reached in his life due to his unwillingness to wake up and smell the choices. Filled with quotable lines, Shaun of the Dead launched the international careers of Pegg, Wright and Nick Frost.
Zombieland - 2009
Written by Rhett Reese & Paul Wernick
Directed by Ruben Fleischer
Speaking of how zombies are well-suited to comedy, Zombieland definitely favors the comedy side of the family. Good ol' boy Woody Harrelson joins a particularly twitchy Jesse Eisenberg on a cross-country trek post outbreak. They run into Emma Stone and Abigail Breslin as another duo of survivors. Neither duo wants to trust the other, but they just might need each other. The rules of Zombie Survival are discussed, Twinkies are the ultimate food in post-civilzation America, and Bill Murray steals the show, appearing as... Bill Murray.
The Cabin in the Woods - 2012
Written by Joss Whedon & Drew Goddard
Directed by Drew Goddard
Okay, this barely qualifies as a zombie movie, but there ARE zombies, and it IS a great movie. As has happened time and again in ages past, five young people go to a remote cabin and unleash a terrible evil. The evil they happen to unleash in this case is an inbred frontier family of living deadness. The blood begins to flow... but there's more going on here than meets the dangling eyeball. Though frequently overlooked as such, this is a fully qualified entry in the greater Whedon family of quality entertainments.
ParaNorman - 2012
Written by Chris Butler
Directed by Chris Butler & Sam Fell
Norman Babcock is like a lot of kids his age. He's fascinated with monster movies; zombies in particular. Norman is NOT like a lot of kids. Norman sees dead people. Everywhere. All the time. This tends not to endear him to his classmates at school, and frustrates the hell out of his family. When his crazy uncle dies, it falls to Norman to perform the ritual that will protect his town from the curse of a colonial era witch or the dead will walk again.
Norman does not perform the ritual.
Mayhem ensues, and everyone has a lesson or two coming their way. ParaNorman is a funny and touching work of stop-motion animation from Laika, the studio behind Coraline and The Box Trolls.
Honorable Mentions:
Maybe not great films, but ones that offer something fresh or interesting to the zombie library.
Deadgirl - 2008
Written by Trent Haaga
Directed by Marcel Sarmiento & Gadi Harel
I almost forgot this one because it's so unsettling. A couple of teenage boys explore a long-since abandoned asylum, discovering a locked door buried behind a hallway crammed full of old equipment and refuse. Behind the door, they find the body of a girl in much better condition than her surroundings. To their surprise, she's not exactly dead... but not exactly alive either. What follows is, shall we say, some of the poorer behavior of which opportunistic teenage boys are capable. The tension and fear at work in Deadgirl hinge primarily on human behavior. Their secret discovery builds conflict between them, and the tinder of conflict grows until something has to ignite it. While relatively light on the gore, Deadgirl is probably the most genuinely horrific film on this entire list.
Dance of the Dead - 2008
Written by Joe Ballarini
Directed by Gregg Bishop
A zombie plague strikes on the night of the senior prom and it falls to the schools dateless misfits to rescue their classmates, or at least achieve a little cathartic release on what remains. A fun, funny high school flick with lots of head-smashy goodness.
28 Weeks Later - 2007
Written by [see link for writing team]
Directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
This loosely related sequel to 28 Days Later is in nowhere near the same class as the original, but taken on its own terms, it does tell a unique story. It's a more traditional zombie movie with the hook being that it focuses on the members of a single family and their recurring bouts of terror as England experiences the cleansing, and recurrence of the "Rage Virus."
World War Z - 2013
Written by [see link for writing team]
Directed by Marc Forster
WWZ is rumored to have had a troubled production, and it shows. While possessing many flaws, the fact remains that WWZ is a high-budget mad spectacle, and for that alone, it's worth a viewing. Granted, some of this spectacle also qualifies as flaws -- such as ridiculously fast-moving zombies forming a giant mound to reach the top of a stories-high protective wall which should be beyond both zombie logic and basic physics, but it's undeniably freaky and cool nevertheless. It also follows the efforts to sort out the cause and develop a cure, which is an aspect that we rarely get to see.
This list is subject to change pending further viewing.
Separated at Death?
This stop-motion animated film opens with an homage to campy old horror films. The protagonist is a young boy whose father uses control to allay his concerns about his son being a "misfit" is a society that is predominantly ignorant and fearful. This boy's "gifts" cause him to become involved with the dead. The living dead rise and the boy must use his knowledge to restore restore peace in his quirky small town with a dark and unique history.
This film is
ParaNorman (August 17, 2012)
Directed by Chris Butler & Sam Fell
from Laika Entertainment
This film is
Frankenweenie (October 5, 2012)
Directed by Tim Burton
from Walt Disney Pictures
In ParaNorman, our young male protagonist is Norman. Norman can see the spirits of the lingering dead all around him. This puts him at odds with the painfully mundane citizens of Blithe Hollow, who treat him with apathy to antagonism. His father fears for his son, but lacks the tools to express this fear in any way but anger. His passive mother struggles to facilitate understanding between them.
In Frankenweenie, our young male protagonist is Victor. Victor is... good at science. This puts him at odds with no one but his father's expectations. The other children of New Holland appear to be equally as enrapt by science, and Victor is actually the most normal one among them. His father tells us that he's a misfit and goads him into playing baseball. His passive mother is... passive.
The town of Blithe Hollow was the site of a colonial witch hunt which has burdened the town with a witch's curse and the threat of the walking dead rising from their graves.
The town of New Holland was founded by Dutch settlers, thus explaining the windmill in the film's climax, and built on... an abandoned mine? An ancient burial ground? We can't be sure, other than it explains the frequent thunderstorms.
When Norman's creepy, societally rejected uncle dies, the burden falls to Norman to keep the living dead at bay for another year. With the reluctant aid of others, he gets to the bottom of Blithe Hollow's mystery, and, saving them, earns their respect.
When Victor's dog Sparky dies, his creepy, societally rejected science teacher gives him the idea of how he might reanimate his pooch. Reluctant to aid others, Victor's secret gets out, unleashing a plague of living dead pets. Sidestepping mystery, Victor and his friends smash monsters.
It was impossible, as I watched Frankeweenie, not to continually reflect upon ParaNorman, which had already become a favorite film for 2012, and in reflecting, it was nearly as difficult not to find Frankenweenie wanting in comparison.
ParaNorman was one of those classic stories; familiar, not because we've seen it before, but because it's true. It deals with universal themes. Its characters demonstrate human behaviors. Things happen because of natural reactions. It took a story that first appeared to be simple and challenged the basic preconceptions of who and what the living dead were, and in so doing, became something more.
Frankenweenie, perhaps not so surprisingly, felt like it was cobbled together from the dead pieces of other movies. While some have responded positively to it for representing a return to form for Tim Burton, it's like a reanimated form of old Burton, lacking in satisfaction or surprises.
It's Burton wanking to Burton.
Now I'm not one of those on the Bash on Burton bandwagon. For years, when others have accused him of falling off, I've continued to feel that there's always been something interesting to his films, even when they stumble... even when they're completely unnecessary remakes. Up until, pretty specifically, Alice in Wonderland.
Now, they're not the same movie and I am in no way suggesting that anyone copied anyone else. The film industry is certainly no stranger to very similar films coming out in proximity to each other, especially animated films -- A Bug's Life (1998) /Antz (1998), Finding Nemo (2003) /Shark Tale (2004) /Shark Bait (2006) -- but the similarities demanded analysis, and the analysis stacked up in favor of ParaNorman.
It attempted more. It was better animated. It was better designed. The characters, even the less likeable ones, were more relateable and dimensionally human.
The other was thin of thought and intent. It attempted nothing more than to serve up a reheated dish of the film-maker's obsessions. To start with, it's obviously a retelling of the 1931 film version of Frankenstein, recast as a boy-and-his-dog film, which is itself an overly familiar trope at this point. But Burton already did that in 1984 with a live-action short film, so this retells THAT, only longer. Little visual cues abound. The neighbor girl is predictably Winona. The monster cat's snaky legs are familiarly Beetlejuicy. The classroom science rivals are mad scientists from movies today's kids will not have seen.

I'd venture to say that ParaNorman exists in a universe where Tim Burton has already happened, or rather, is the product of a universe in which he's happened. "Okay, that's been done. We've seen that. NOW WHAT? Let's go deeper. Let's be about something."
Burton is still about being Burton. He's like a Burton App now. Hey, let's take [existing fiction] and Burton it up, and in this case, it's like Burton pulling a John Malkovich and ending up in a Burton Burton, Burton Burton Burton.... BURTON!!!
Which is not to say that Frankenweenie is bad, per se. It's fun. It's... I dunno, cute? It's probably very satisfying if you're looking for the Burton Experience, and perhaps more isolated from ParaNorman in context.
So in true Mirror, Mirror form, the Evil Twin goatee in the race between undead-themed animated films in 2012 goes to...
...Hotel Transylvania, because get the hell out of here with your Adam Sandler & Kevin James.
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