by MouthForWar » Tue Jun 15, 2010 2:12 am
Watched this on demand tonight since we didn't get it in theaters.
After watching this, I've realized I'll NEVER agree with the general concensous of horror fans. This movie was fun as hell. No, its not as good as Night or Dawn (or even Day), but its much better than Diary and at least on par with Land. Its vintage Romero through and through. The tone is right there with the rest of the Dead series. The writing and acting are about on the same level as the previous entries (but better than the too on-the-nose Diary).
It makes me wonder what the response to a movie like Dawn of the Dead would be now. I guarantee you people would b*tch all day about zombies on escalators and the pie fight... the older I get, the less I care about a film's status and I just enjoy it for what it is... if its a classic and I think it sucks, I'll say so. I think a lot of people seem obliged to find faults in current films like Survival (like bad acting), while overlooking them in older films. Even Night of the Living Dead (the BEST zombie film of all time and one of the top 5 horror films ever IMO) has some spotty acting. Same goes with Star Wars. The prequels are bad because the writing is lazy and they are boring... but the original Star Wars movies had silly dialogue and bad acting and plot holes also, yet those are the biggest complaints about the prequels. Or Godzilla Final Wars, which is every bit as stupid as Godzilla vs. Megalon or Gigan, but polarized the fan base MUCH more than those. I'm not saying Survival is as good as Dawn, I'm just saying that NONE of these movies are perfect... yet there's loads of zombie fans (as well as Star Wars fans) that will scream to high heavens that the original trilogies are perfect and flawless, even though a lot of their problems exist in the newer entries as well. My point is that I think some people see older films with "classic" status through rose colored glasses sometimes.
With these nerd backlashes, I've been finding more and more that a lot of the complaints about a new film can be applied to the classics as well. I just think modern audiences are too cynical. I think the older entries in any series always get a free pass because of a certain legacy or nostalgia in some viewers and I think that renders them incapable of seeing them as what they are. In this case, the Dead films are all b-movies made on really low budgets and with unknown actors, and this one is no exception. And I'm not someone who likes these just cuz of Romero... he's made quite a few films I don't like at all, but it just so happens that none of the Dead films are among them. Romero doing zombies always feels right, while most of the time, other zombie films just seem to feel like knock offs. Romero's worst zombie flick is usually better than the rest of the pack. While some of the original genre greats like Argento, Craven, Hooper, and even Carpenter have certainly fallen off the wagon with their last few films, I think Romero is still making decent films. He has yet to release anything near the monumental failure of something like Argento's Mother of Tears.
Day of the Dead was UNIVERSALLY loathed by horror fans when it came out and its considered a classic now and a lot of the haters from that time have gone back on their word. Time can only tell how Land, Diary, and Survival will hold up. But while some armchair critics pick these films apart and expect the next Dawn of the Dead with each passing entry, I'll enjoy them in the now for what they are... fun and imaginative b-movies that actually try to say something.
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