The first time I had heard about Shaun of the Dead was earlier this year at Ain't it Cool News. I remember reading the descriptions and seeing the early trailers and thinking how good it looked. I also remember thinking that it did not look like anything that would et played in that many theaters, the best I figured would be a direct to DVD deal similar to Bubba Ho Tep. Seeing this pop up at the local cineplex brought a smile to this zombie.
The movie isn't so much about the zombies, but about the characters who are trying to deal with this latest uprising of their relatively simple lives. The movie deals with a guy who is coasting through life who reaches a point where he must make a choice to step up or be swallowed by his surroundings. In this case, that motivator happens to be zombies.
Shaun is the hero of this piece, working a dead end job at an electronics store, hassled by a girlfriend who wants more in life, urged by his best friend that everything is fine as is, not to mention a host of other factors causing him to wander through life in a stupor. Then one day something is different, Shaun has to step up and do something. He has to take charge of a situation which has stunned everyone else into shock.
The best example of this film are two nearly identical tracking shots early in the film. We see Shaun get up, leave his apartment, go to the convenience store up the road, buy a soda, and finally return home. The whole time passing people on the street, a kid playing with a soccer ball, a bum looking for change, various other people walking on their own paths. We see Shaun do the same thing the next day, except everyone along the way are zombies, yet Shaun is oblivious to them, to the point that he even ignores the bloody handprints on the cooler. It, as well as a few other examples I won't describe, is a good example of how it is we who are zombies sleepwalking through our lives.
Anyway, on the surface what we get is a highly entertaining horror/comedy in the same vein as Evil Dead and Dead Alive, but I also think this is more accessible to non-zombie fans. The characters are just everyday guys doing what they know, not wisecracking heroes. I found them much easier to relate to which helps the film strike home that much more. We also get one of the best gore scenes I have seen in recent years.
The script from Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg, who also played Shaun, is not only well written and funny, but is full of references to other dead films that have come before it including Evil Dead and Dawn of the Dead. It is a really well written script with characters we all like. There is of course the put-upon Shaun who is forced to step up, and the slacker best friend, Ed (Nick Frost). Also the girlfriend who wants more Liz (Kate Ashfield) and her friends Dianne and David (Lucy Davis and Dylan Moran). Not to mention countless zombies. Edgar Wright also directed the film with an interesting visual flair. While the vision is unique, it is also peppered with nods to those that have come before, it is a fine line to play between homage and plagiarism. Wright balances it nicely, I eager to see what he comes up with next. Is it possible that we are seeing the beginnings of another Sam Raimi or Peter Jackson? Time will tell.
Bottomline. Very funny movie, nice gore. Great characters with some great lines. I recommend that you see this movie, it is more than just a zombie movie. I understand that this team is also responsible for a television series called Spaced, I'm not familiar with it, but based on this it may be worth tracking down.
Highly Recommended.
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