Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Day of the Dead



Despite the shorter span of time between this film and its prequel, significantly more time seems to have passed within this world since Dawn of the Dead than between that film and Night of the Living Dead. The undead have overrun the entire country at least, and a group of humans struggles to survive in an underground bunker. Despite having to rely on each other to live, nobody seems to be able to get along as the scientists researching the zombies butt heads with the military men who are supposed to protect them, and the strains of living in such conditions have started to weigh heavily on some. One guy's trying to domesticate the dead and is actually making progress with a particularly clever fellow named Bub, another wants to figure out what actually causes the transformation, and the new commander of the army presence just seems to want to be a dick all day. Day of the Dead is certainly less focused on a message than previously in the series, with the only thing you can gleam from it is again how men are their own downfall as much as the zombies are.

The gore is much improved this time, with guts falling all over the place, humans being ripped and torn apart, and a lot of heads being opened by bullets. It's harder for me to be disgusted by that sort of thing when the situation is so ludicrous, and people getting violently eaten was honestly a welcome respite from my boredom with the rest of the movie. It's shorter than Dawn of the Dead, but it still spends too much time on unimportant conversations and periods of nothing much happening. Bub and the scientist teaching him were an entertaining diversion for a while, but there's just not enough action to keep the movie going. Dawn had a pretty crazy scene in the beginning to set up the sense of carnage as society breaks down, but the opening here doesn't do a lot to get you excited. It succeeds better as a horror movie than Dawn did, as the zombies felt more like a real threat to their lives, and the last scenes where things go to hell are generally pretty effective. Overall Romero's quintessential zombie series hasn't done a tone to really impress me, but it hasn't felt like a waste of time either.

1 comment:

Will Errickson said...

Great post. I agree the movie has an excessive amount of down-time. However I first saw this as a teenager in the late '80s and it was, at that time, the most intense and unsettling movie I'd ever seen. My taste in horror had always run to the darker, more serious films, but DAY OF THE DEAD showed me just how dark and relentless horror could get.