Archive for Zombies

Night of the Living Dorks (watched 3/24/10)

Posted in 1 Brain with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 03/30/2010 by schlockfest

I remember a joke about an optimist. It’s about a kid digging in a room full of shit, and when his parents ask him why he responds “Well, with all this shit there’s gotta be a pony in here somewhere.” I’m beginning to feel like I’m looking for that pony, and Night of the Living Dorks was just another clump of manure flying over my shoulder. The fear is that tomorrow night won’t be filled with the clomping of hooves or even a couple of coconuts clanging together.

... and no you'll never be Bruce Campbell

It of course is compared to Shaun of the Dead. But it seems really any movie that has a zombie in it and makes you chuckle gets compared to Shaun of the Dead. Just like for years any movie with a zombie in it was the next Night of the Living Dead. It doesn’t have to be that way. In fact it’s more reasonable to say American Pie didn’t need to be remade with zombies in it and worse actors. It’s even better to say “those are classics, stop fucking with my hopes.” Where NOTLDorks gets it’s 5.8 on IMDB is beyond me. “It’s a crapfest that could only be worse if JLo was in it” to quote some member of schlockfest who I was too brain dead to acknowledge.

Don’t watch it. Too many corneas were harmed in our screening already. It’s not the worst piece of schlock I’ve ever witnessed, but it’s not worth passing over all the amateur porn or Youtube videos of kids screaming on rollercoasters on the internet. Here, in fact, watch this instead. I promise you’ll like it better.

What’s it have: Teen love, virgins, elixirs, hot teachers, students, preps, German hipsters, subtitles, dubbed version, oh did I mention cliches, an overrated IMDB rating, a negative impact on producers pocketbook

What it’s missing: Well, if you’re looking for a box of crap, it’s not missing a thing.

For the love of Shaun of the Dead… skip it.

1/5 needlessly long alternate endings

Zombie Honeymoon (watched 3/17/10)

Posted in 1 Brain with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 03/23/2010 by schlockfest

I first caught a snippet of this on Fearnet.com and stopped watching 5 minutes into it thinking this would make a good schlock night movie. What I missed, and Jake would later, so aptly, point out is that: the movie really isn’t about zombies. It’s about cannibals! It should be called Cannibal Honeymoon… geez, get your monsters right.

... but we always go to Jack in the Box.

Regardless of the cannibal/zombie argument it was better suited to be a Lifetime movie about relationships. The emotional pain of loving someone who destroys everything around you. Your frantic attempts to cover up for all their indiscretions. The time spent convincing yourself it’s not that bad. It’s all there. And somehow it sounds so good on paper, but it just doesn’t translate to the screen. I have no idea why this movie didn’t work, not really. (Hey pssssssttt… y’all asleep yet?)

However, the night did end in a serious bout of laughing, but I don’t think we can attribute it to Zombie Honeymoon. In fact we decided “the ones upstairs” watching RomComs would have gotten more enjoyment out of it. Though “the ones upstairs” disagreed vehemently, insisting it didn’t have Hugh Grant in it. In fact that’s what this movie came down to: a debate about Hugh Grant, and the last thing any self respecting schlocker wants is a debate about Hugh Grant in their house.

What it has: travel agents (do those even exist?),cannibals, black goop, lots of relationship issues, really bad bedside manner, vegan women vs. carnivorous men, skin teasers, death, panties, arguing, marital strife, honeymoon strife, relationship strife, and viewer strife

What it’s missing: zombies (particularly important since their in the title), a plausible reason for the “zombie’s” death, a coupon in the box for a six pack

Though the movie itself isn’t much to write about it did break a long streak of movies we were having trouble laughing at. It succeeds on that level, offering itself up as a punching bag for jokes. The laughing at factor is the main factor in it’s “high” rating. There’s probably better one’s out there to laugh with, but make sure you have a group to rip on this one with if you watch it.

1.5/5 Steve Szymanski’s

A Cat in the Brain (watched 3/10/10)

Posted in 2 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 03/22/2010 by schlockfest

We’ve been supposed to watch this one for a while. In fact almost every week for three months it’s been on the list as the movie to watch. However, it’s always been supplanted by some other director’s dream that couldn’t gurgle above mediocrity. Fearful that all of the buildup would lead to a massive schlockfest meltdown we went for it.

A Cat in the Brain is Fulci’s homage to…. well, Fulci. And dammit, we at schlockfest like Fulci. We like Fulci so much we laid the burden of saving schlockfest squarely on this director’s shoulders. That’s right, schlockfest has hit a low. With the crap we watch it’s a painful event more akin to a marathon. The greatest reward is being able to say you finished, and for some of us that includes a nap. And the only people you can share your victories with are the ones who endured with you.

The movie opens brilliantly, and then gets stuck in a rut it never emerges from. Collectively we decided the biggest issue with the movie was Fulci actually trying to work within a plot. Normally he operates under the pretense of a plot and takes his movies anywhere he pleases. In this instance he operated under the pretense NO plot and somehow got stuck in one. He used the same scenes over and over and over, and just when you thought he wouldn’t do it again… you get it.

He also took an interesting direction in trying to describe his lack of personal sanity, but he doesn’t really succeed there unless you call his failure a personal triumph as an example of insanity. Have I lost you yet? Good. Because that’s the mindset you need to be in to watch this one. It was by far the weakest effort of the three Fulci movies we’ve watched. The other problem I think is that you’re watching a director of a niche genre make reference to his whole catalog of niche films. (Something along the lines of Horror>Foreign Horror>Foreign Horror Schlock>Foreign Horror Schlock Directors>Personal catalogs of that directors films) Though if that’s the case it would be our fault for not watching more Fulci movies…. and I guess that’s a good place to leave it: A Cat in the Brain is for the extremely well seasoned Fulci watcher, hold off until you know all his children by name and what his grandfather’s favorite vineyard is.

What it has: that damn guy with a chainsaw, a cat eating a brain, hypnosis, a piano wire, a really great trailer, token eye scene, gore, and psychosis

What it’s missing: Well… like any good fulci film it has almost everything, even fulci himself

Be warned… it’s a lot slower than the trailer… and wait till you have a few other Fulci’s under your belt.

2.5/5 metronomes

The Burrowers (watched 3/3/10)

Posted in 2 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 03/22/2010 by schlockfest

Schlock is conducive to creating an adage about high expectations, and The Burrowers served as a prime example. Well the first thing is: it certainly isn’t schlock. However, we adjusted, switched mindsets and hunkered down for what was a highly recommended flick. All of us in the room, mind you, are not only horror fans, but Western junkies as well. What could be better? Last week: sheep meet zombies, this week: John Wayne takes on the undead…

... but she's so cold, pa.

Except it didn’t really come together that way. It was the quietest schlock night we’ve had in a while. There wasn’t a tremendous amount to laugh at, the scares were nonexistent and the cinematography was there, but nothing amazing. When it was all said and done and the credits were rolling Jude summed it up best with”It was a mediocre western, a mediocre horror, and the sum of it’s parts was less than…” Less than what?! But like the wise sage that he is, he had already disappeared before we could ask.

If you think it’s a flick for you:  you’ll get just as much enjoyment out of it by yourself as you would with a group. Save it for a night when you have nothing else to do.

What it has: racial tensions, people on horses, people underneath the ground, people on horses riding across open fields, people in uniforms chasing people underground, evil people (mainly the one’s on horses, in uniforms, chasing the people underground), native people, and finally that “oh shit, you showed us the monster moment”

What it’s missing: some singularly badass protagonist that makes it a western worth watching; aliens; spaceships; a cool reason for the burrowers other than the tired, cliched one we always get; a Penelope Cruz intermission

As you can see there was nothing here that blew us away, and there was really nothing to hate. All in all we were just a bit indifferent.

2/5 translation errors

Black Sheep (watched 2/24/10)

Posted in 5 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 03/03/2010 by schlockfest

I’ve been lazy. I haven’t been writing, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been watching. Black Sheep, not the Chris Farley movie from the 90s, is one of my favorites. It’s like going home to chicken fried steak, mashed potatoes/gravy and creamed corn. It’s all you could ever want, and you leave satisfied. It also gives me hope that amazing horror comedy can still be made.

So it’s no surprise that when I had a group of nonschlockers over wanting to have a good time I pulled this one off the shelf. Why else? Because by the end of the movie 6/7 people spent the whole movie laughing, and the seventh person spent the whole movie hiding behind a pillow squealing with fear from the zombie sheep. Oh, that’s right, zombie sheep.

The movie takes one of the more humanist countries, gives them  greedy capitalists, and pits them against the most fearful herbivores to ever munch grass. And if that’s not enough of a plot (at least by schlock standards) it goes everywhere a sheep movie can go, everywhere. And while it goes there, it looks really good. Weta Workshops did the special effects (same company that did Lord of the Rings).

But enough babbling, here’s what it has: zombie sheep, methane gas, golden shear awards, Experience, hippies, International investors, Frau fetish scientist, cattle dog, acupuncture, evil older brothers, and a genetically altered wool sheep’s coat guaranteed to be softer when you grab it from the sides

What it’s missing: anybody you’ll recognize, the Fiords, neighbors, or cows

I’m sure you’ve already seen it, but in case you haven’t…

5/5 Baaaaaas at the moon

[REC] (watched 2/17/10)

Posted in 2 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 02/18/2010 by schlockfest

Maybe I’m reacting to the hype. Maybe I’m a bad critic. Or just maybe the camera was shaking so freaking much I was always cognizant of the fact I was watching a bad movie. (Don’t hate me cause I’m honest.) I’m not going to sit here and pick it apart, but c’mon, your premise is that a news crew is filming this entire event. Why does it need to look like you strapped the camera to the back of a gorilla and threw bananas against the wall. I saw Cloverfield, I can hang, but this was simply too much. I was never able to divest myself from the fact I was staring at a shaking image, and because of that there were no scares or thrills, only a lot of eyerubbing.

Scary, Funny, or... "Jake! Wake up!"

Funny, Scary, or... "Jake. Wake Up!"

Then there was the plot. There are throngs of forums of people ready to make love to this film and declare it the Citizen Kane of horror. Why? The story wasn’t new. The acting was typical. And decisions by the characters were bland. No one broke a window; did something morally deprave; hell, even the source of the virus was given deniable plausibility by trying to do the right thing in God’s eyes. There were plenty of opportunities for these questionable acts to happen. For instance when we’re watching the Health Inspector through the window, but even this scene makes the conspiracy fall apart. He was just trying to do the right thing!

All this said, it wasn’t the worst movie I’ve ever seen or even truly bad. [REC] just really rubbed me the wrong way because of all the hype. It doesn’t live up. If you were a child in the 90s and missed Blair Witch Project and saw this in the theatres… maybe I get it? However, it fails itself on so many levels it’s frustrating. Why doesn’t anyone go crazy and do something irrational? Why do TV sets still work when the power in the building is out? Why? Why? Why? I’ll stop. Hell, watch it. Everyone else seems to be in love with it, but I’m not enamored.

What it’s got: Fast zombies, Old ladies in panties, Graphic bite wounds, A tailor shop with stretchers, A cameraman with DT’s, Plastic drapes, a dumbass health inspector, religious overtones, rabid dogs, angry children, an introduction whose sole purpose was to push this into 80 minute range

What it’s missing: a reason for the hype, a working cure, pyrotechnics, a budget (but I’m cool with that), a reason why we’re watching it in the first place (not sarcastically, but plot wise), any moral ambiguity in the character’s actions

Lower your expectations, turn on the dubbing, enjoy the show?

2/5 Festival Awards

Day of the Dead 2008 (watched 2/16/09)

Posted in 2 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 02/17/2010 by schlockfest

I guess I’m on a bit of a remake kick in my personal time, and please don’t think less of me. This week I took one for the team and watched the Day of the Dead remake that went straight to DVD. I’ve said before I don’t make comparisons to the original, and I won’t make any exception here (there are that many synonyms for abomination).

"Pretty please with sugar on top may I act like a badass?"

Truthfully though… it wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t good either. I’m wondering if Mena Suvari is considering a claim that a body double played the whole role for her. Maybe it was a fun side project, but definitely not a step up. Ving Rhames also shows up in this Romero remake, but he’s not as ass kickingly cool as he was in the Dawn of the Dead from 2004.

****Next Paragraph is a vague spoiler section (not really much to spoil though) skip to the ***** if you want to miss it

Typical story, follows most traditional/remake horror rules: black people don’t fare so well, teenagers who have sex don’t do so well unless you’re of relation to the protagonist, and government agents and their conspiracies get there due

*****************************

The zombies are freakin’ weird with some heavy hands on the CGI and excessive speeding of sequences in the editing room. It’s probably a taste thing, but the pacing just didn’t work. It’s a Romero concept with 28 Days Later zombies. I had a hard time visually digesting that one. The makeup was nice, though rushed in parts, which is probably the biggest asset the movie has to offer. (Trust me, you’re not flipping this one on because of the plot).

I did end up rooting for Nick Cannon’s character Salazar a lot simply because he has some of the best kills in the movie. There are some nice (don’t read great) special effects sequences. Absolutely nothing is here for the brain though, and if you are a die hard Romero fan skip it, you’ll probably end up pulling your eyeball out and eating it before the movies over.

What it’s got: Fast zombies, big budget, massive flame thrower, evil scientist genius, a lot of driving (how big is this small town anyway?), intelligent zombies (oxymoron?), a plot that was written while sniffing glue, government conspiracies (surprise!), a bizarre sequence where the town substation blows the whole town blacks out and then mysteriously regains power, and a blu-ray release (really?!?!)

What it’s missing: the scene where Ving Rhames is castrated (wtf?), respect for parents, decent burials, a lack of residue after burning, helicopters (c’mon where are the helicopters?), trigger locks in gun shops, acting

No surprises here. You want to watch zombies. You get to watch zombies. Would I pick it up over say re-watching 28 Days, the original Day of the Dead, or an episode of Lassie? Probably not, but it wasn’t painful.

2/5 zip ties

Blog Updates and Movies to Watch…

Posted in Other Schlocky Observations with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 02/15/2010 by schlockfest

I stumbled across this blog with a list of movies that definitely are worth a look, and also I’ve added a rating system so please feel free to click the stars at the end of the post that rate the review…

The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue (watched 2/10/09)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 02/15/2010 by schlockfest

Hey. What’s that stuff movies used to have back in the day? Oh that’s right, plot. And this movie is just what Schlock Night needed to continue breathing life into what was becoming a weekly buildup of apprehension. Who knows maybe after this week we’ll be off life support.

On the cover The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue is described as the best zombie movie ever made. A tall order by anyone’s standards. Does it deserve to be called the best? I may not go that far, but it definitely wins in some aspects. And what was that? It’s Italian title was what? Yup. Zombi 3. So how does Zombi 3 fall into the great lineage of  Romero and Fulci when it actually predates both “Zombi” features. I won’t delve into the tedium. It wouldn’t be schlocky of me, but if you’re interested visit this site (and thank Jude for finding it).

What made this movie successful? Is it too cliche to say it had heart? Maybe at times it even loves Night of the Living Dead so much it becomes predictable, but you enjoy the ride nonetheless. It’s characters are memorable and the zombie attacks are ludicrously hysterical. While it does push a little bit of gore factor it definitely won’t appeal to the torture porn enthusiasts. However, it will resonate with high brow movie connoisseur and old school horror enthusiasts alike. You really can’t go wrong here.

What it has: A streaker, dubbing, one of the more memorable zombies of all time, intelligent zombies (they exist now), ultrasonic radiation (yup, that exists too), heroin, skeptical police, cars Jake would die for, and an excellent elevator scene

What it’s missing: an abundance of sound, tolerance for authority, excessive gore, a reason to pass up on this classic

Though it nears perfection I can’t say it’s the best or perfect, but it’s damn close.

4.5/5 radioactive, cannibalistic ants

The Descent (watched 2/3/10)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 02/10/2010 by schlockfest

This movie made me nervous, in two ways. The first time I was nervous began after a really amazing opening that left the whole group in awe and laughing at it’s twisted nature. For the next twenty minutes I feared that somebody had copied Sisterhood of the Traveling Cave Dwellers on the DVD, but then the movie began and so did a new type of nervous. Seldom does a movie (especially of the caliber we watch) succeed on such a high level with it’s setting.

wait for it.....

Much like RZs Halloween has you question why you’d have sex in a imprisoned serial killer’s house, The Descent makes you think caving is the stupidest idea since Russian Roulette. The movie is uncomfortable and claustrophobic, which was voiced by schlockers multiple times during the viewing. The scenes are dark, the spaces are tight, and it translates really well for the viewer.

You must be warned that there are about 20 minutes early on that don’t further the plot and  only leave you on the edge of you’re seat if you’re trying to imagine the winner of the pillow fight that never happens. My thinking was that they were attempting to reach the almighty 80 minute mark and this was the fluffer to get there. However, it manages to hit the unwieldy 100 minute mark of schlock so I’m not sure who this segment was supposed to appeal to, as none of our varied demographic cared  about whether Suave or White Rain smells better.

What it had: Albino fanged cave dwellers, ice axes (when caving), bad sense of direction, foreshadowing, tensions over an affair, blood bath ode to Carrie, many reasons to enjoy life on the surface, copper pipes, lots of stupid decisions, compound fractures, and were those mammoth bones?

What it was missing: pillow fights, an exit strategy, a sensible use of battery life, and Sigourney Weaver (no way those freaky, fanged albino would have feasted that long)

In the end  there was plenty of blood and the movie finished really well. The Descent wasn’t perfect, but it was definitely a good time.

4/5 phosphorescent rocks