Dawn
of the Dead
by Victoria Alexander
The
real fun of horror movies is putting yourself in the picture. What
would you do? Or, will you learn how to cleverly survive from one
of the characters?
The
Black Death took one-third to one-half of Europe's population.
This phenomenal depopulation actually influenced dramatic positive
changes which, according to "The Black Death: Natural and
Human Disaster in Medieval Europe" by Robert S. Gottfried,
"profoundly influenced the course of western history."
Survival
of the Fittest? You decide whether any of these characters deserve
to make it out of the Mall alive and then procreate. Perhaps a fleshing-eating
zombie is Nature's scheme for culling the herd.
The
remake of George Romero's 1979 film does not want to annoy
us with philosophical trappings. There is no sociological subtext.
It
does not matter why people have turned into flesh-eating zombies.
Nobody knows anything except you must shoot the zombies in the head.
Apparently, and suddenly, all over the U.S., people are being bitten,
die, then are reanimated as flesh-eating zombies. If there is no
one to eat, do they turn on each other? Can you just wait them out?
Ana
(Sarah Polley), a Wisconsin nurse, wakes up to find her boyfriend
has been bitten by a neighbor's young girl. He then attacks
Ana. She kills him. Ana is covered in his blood. Ana jumps in her
car and promptly crashes. She meets up with a group of survivors:
Kenneth (Ving Rhames), a police officer, Michael (Jake Weber), a
salesman, and a young couple, Andre (Mekhi Phifer), and his pregnant
Russian wife (Inna Korobkina).
Somehow,
and I do not know how, they get inside a mall before it opens. However,
the zombies do not know how to get inside after them. Three security
guards are inside. Tough leader CJ (Michael Kelly) does not want
to let them in. He reluctantly agrees. They have food and everything
they need to survive but the zombies are fast-moving. This mis-matched
group allows some other uninfected passive people to join them:
an older couple, a young couple, and an arrogant guy. Except for
an arrogant guy (Ty Burrell), these people have no opinions about
what to do. We know they are background victims.
CJ
is the only one making sense. Ana, of course, doesn't mind
being coated in blood. She wants to help the others. CJ is promptly
relieved of his leadership duties until his "mall expertise"
is needed. I was unhappy when CJ turned into a dutiful team player.
If
I were in the Mall, I would have geared up with metal-spiked leather
bands around my neck – a favored target of the zombies –
and worn a lot of clothes. I'd have a high-powered gun cocked
and ready. I would not wander around. I'd camp close to the
food court.
I
liked the way the screenplay by James Gunn (based on George Romero's
original screenplay) explores the situation's more mundane
aspects: after being confined for a period of time, the group engages
in playing board games, killing zombies from the rooftop and communicating
with a guy across the way holed up above a gun store.
Once
again, someone falls in love with a stray dog though this animal
is used in an imaginative way. The team decides to leave the Mall.
They have a rather good plan for getting away that works. The denouement
is a witty and delivers the to-the-mat punch.
Directed
by Zack Snyder, this new DAWN is the zombie movie for today's
bored young audience who do spend a lot of time wandering in malls.
Unfortunately, I was not thrilled with the way this assembled group
of ordinary men and women handled the crisis. I would expect more
hysterical, high-volumn tension. Yet Snyder directs with a robust
hand and the soundtrack is smart. It is the character with the best
angle for survival.
DAWN
OF THE DEAD
Universal Pictures presents a Strike Entertainment/New Amsterdam
Entertainment production
Credits:
Director: Zack Snyder
Screenwriter: James Gunn
Based on screenplay by: George Romero
Producers: Richard Rubinstein, Marc Abraham, Eric Newman
Executive producers: Thomas Bliss, Dennis Jones, Armyan Bernstein
Director of photography: Matthew Leonetti
Production designer: Andrew Neskoromny
Editor: Niven Howie
Costume designer: Denise Cronenberg
Special makeup effects: David Leroy Anderson
Music: Tyler Bates
Cast:
Ana: Sarah Polley
Kenneth: Ving Rhames
Michael: Jake Weber
Andre: Mekhi Phifer
Steve: Ty Burrell
CJ: Michael Kelly
Terry: Kevin Zegers
Nicole: Lindy Booth
Luda: Inna Korobkina
Running
time -- 100 minutes
MPAA rating: R
by
Victoria Alexander - FilmsInReview.com |