Apparently this happens after the first
one, and they THOUGHT that they had the outbreak under control, BUT THEY
DIDN’T. Shocker. Anyways, found footage,
first person view stuff has a tendency to get old fast, so we’ll see how long
this one can go before it gets totally fucking stale. I’m not entirely sure why there are two
directors, but whatever. It starts off
with a very shaky hand held pointed mostly at the floor.
[...]
[Mother finds her daughter hiding in her
room and gets caught by ZOMBIE HUSBAND/FATHER, the footage cuts...]
Starkwell: I know I’ve asked the question
before, but who exactly is finding and editing these, you know, in the context
of pretending that this is real?
[This film is set as a documentary about
the world post-outbreak.]
Starkwell: So the documentary guy felt it
was important to start off his doc with a shot of a family dying?
Lovelock: YOU’RE STYLE IS QUITE
UNORTHODOX. But effective.
Starkwell: Great line. Criminally misused.
[...]
Anyways, then the military staff at the
hospital that the camera is following witness Hell breaking loose at the
hospital. And everyone is getting
eaten. They escape… but not before they
find and rescue a perfectly made-up blonde girl with a pretty haircut.
[...]
[Soldiers explore a dark room with a
flashlight.]
Starkwell: I guess they only filmed at
night?
Lovelock: Just fucking go to bed, and then
explore in the sunlight. What’s wrong
with these people?
[...]
The soldiers continue to explore rooms with
flashlights, guns, and the occasional night vision camera.
[...]
[They nightvision into a room full of
zombies.]
Lovelock: Nightvision cliché aside, that shit looked cool.
[...]
The footage randomly cuts to other footage,
like people being executed by people in HASMAT suits.
[...]
[They run in the snow with flashlights, and
then one cut later and it’s daylight.]
Starkwell: Blondie certainly looks all put
together for someone who just apparently spent the night in the snow with
nothing more than a windbreaker and a light fire.
Lovelock: They’re like navy seals or
something.
Starkwell: She isn’t. Also… is the lead soldier guy wearing eye
shadow?
[...]
Then the soldiers stumble upon a group of
BAD DUDES who, I think, are raping a zombie?
There’s no real story at this point, it’s really just following soldiers
as they try to survive. Not necessarily
a bad thing, but it’s a touch played out, at this point.
[...]
Starkwell: He is DEFINITELY wearing eye
shadow.
Lovelock: The guy filming… his name is
JONESY.
Starkwell: It’s almost Muggsy.
Lovelock: Hopefully Eye Shadow’s name is
like Spandau Ballet or something.
[Soldiers clear a huge field of zombies.]
Lovelock: At least they deliver on some of
the goods.
[Jonesy and company sit around the camp
fire talking about their lives… they are interrupted by the sounds of the rape
gang from earlier, who seem like they are about to rape a non zombie.]
Starkwell: Why do they always need to go
that route in these fucking movie?
[Soldiers SNIPE some of them.]
Lovelock: So they can DELIVER on that
wicked punishment.
[In the frenzy two of the soldiers die.]
Starkwell: All of this and Blondie still
looks like she just stepped out of the salon.
[...]
Then the soldiers end up in a dark and
snowy cemetery. Starkwell and Lovelock
can’t help but notice that the days seem pretty short, but both agree that they
pick totally awesome locations for staging fights with zombie hordes. By-the-numbers stuff, but executed nicely
enough.
[...]
[Rape Squad captures them and force one of
the dudes to rape one of the girls.]
Starkwell: This shit was lame in the first
movie, and it’s lame now.
Lovelock: More like “Zombie Diarrhea”… “POO”.
Starkwell: That doesn’t even make sense.
Lovelock: “Poo” instead of “two”.
Starkwell: No I know, but why?
Lovelock: Because this rape scene is le caca.
[The guy decides to cut her up with a knife
instead.]
Starkwell: I’m starting to see your point.
[...]
Well, while two of the guys were busy
playing rape-knife, the other soldiers somehow got free and killed Rape Squad.
[...]
[They head into a seemingly abandoned
military base. It’s dark. They have flashlights.]
Starkwell: One flashlight shot, fine. Two, okay… still not terrible. But this is like the seventy fifth.
Lovelock: How do they keep the camera
charged? My camera dies after like an
hour.
Starkwell: Lucky for them their flashlight batteries last forever.
[...]
[Eye Shadow is trying to make a signal on
the beach, hoping that a boat will see them.
The other soldiers abandon him.]
Starkwell: Geez… at least give him a
flashlight…
[Eventually they all die, Jonesy turns the
camera around, goes all “selfie” and blows his brains out.]
Lovelock: If only that was how all selfies
would end.
[...]
I guess the boat came after all, since the twist
at the end was that Eye Shadow was one of the guys in HASMAT suits executing
people. So, I guess the boat came after
all. Honestly, it wasn’t a absolutely terrible movie. It ticked a lot of boxes, was a
vast improvement on the first film… and yet… Starkwell and Lovelock frequently
found themselves bored.
I think you're being generous with a 2. It's awful awful awful.
ReplyDeleteYeah, there were some shots that actually looked cool... that's the only reason it got above a 1, or even a 0.
DeleteAfter watching the first one, doing anything for the sequel is an improvement.
ReplyDeleteYeah, they set a pretty low bar for themselves... haha
Delete