Dawn of the Dead (2004)

reviewed by
Karina Montgomery


Dawn of the Dead
Matinee with Snacks

Zombie movies are not for everyone. That said, I truly believe that

those people who do love zombie movies will LOVE this remake of Dawn

of the Dead. It's fun, scary, witty, nerve-wracking, gory, exciting,

and jam-packed with sly commentary. And it's nowhere near as bloody

and violent as Passion of the Christ.

I am deeply ashamed to admit that I have not seen George Romero's

original 1978 film with its flavor of consumer lemming commentary.

Seems to me that this Dawn effectively uses the homogeneity of modern

America to pay tribute to that film. If they hadn't told you it was

Milwaukee, WI, you would never know where they are by the suburban

and retail clues, which is the point of course - the United States of

Generica is turning us all into zombies. But more immediately and

more importantly, the bite from a really fast-moving, bitey bitey

zombie does it! The slyness here is more confined to funny

soundtrack ironies and appropriately- named (for the film's purposes)

mall businesses.

The film begins slowly, deliberately, almost 1970's slow, and when

the inevitable mayhem ensues (don't worry, you don't have to wait

long), the camera work is interesting and different. Where you'd

think a tight shot would be used, director Zack Snyder and DP Matthew

F. Leonetti (Dead Again) uses a long shot, and vice versa. It's

mildly disorienting just by being different. However, by the time we

(and even the characters) have become acclimatized to the horror, the

shooting style is more mainstream.

Anyone who has ever struggled to maintain walking speed in a dense

crowd, or been driven mad by the general mulish obliviousness of the

Great Unwashed will love witnessing all kinds of secret revenge

fantasies against these undead extras being played out on screen. I

used to avidly play Area 51 (a shooting arcade game with mutants) and

I watched a full play cycle of the first Resident Evil for

Playstation (zombies amok in a sealed environment), and I came out of

this movie with the same glorious, sick, but pleasant adrenaline

rush. Those who have had that rush know what I mean. It's packed

with peanuts, stuffed with action, well-acted, and so scary it's fun.

28 Days Later, while not strictly a zombie film, never found the joy

in its rage-infected bugaboos, although that film pioneered the "hey

they can move as fast as me" zombie movement, used very effectively

in this film as well.  Dawn of the Dead gets the joy as well as its 

parodic 1980's predecessors did, but with the scariness back in.

Notable performances are Jake Weber (Michael), Sarah Polley (Ana),

Michael Kelly (CJ), Mekhi Phifer (Andre) and especially Ty Burrell

(Steve) is hilarious in the role that would have gone to Bruce

Campbell 10 years ago. The soundtrack is a hoot, including Tree

Adams' muzak contributions, and the end credits are chilling and kind

of nervous-laughter funny. If you haven't seen it by now and you

have the slightest inclination to do so, you won't go wrong. It's a

pip! If this would be your first zombie movie, you're not going to

be disappointed.
-- 
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These reviews (c) 2004 Karina Montgomery. Please feel free to

forward but credit the reviewer in the text. Thanks. You can

check out previous reviews at:

http://www.cinerina.com and http://ofcs.rottentomatoes.com - the

Online Film Critics Society

http://www.hsbr.net/reviews/karina/listing.hsbr - Hollywood Stock

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