

Shaun of the Dead (Mark's Take) 02/11/2004 . Source: Mark R. Leeper 
This film is like a crossbreeding of George Romero and Mike Leigh. Oblivious lower-middle-class Londoners slowly become aware that the dead are returning at trying to eat the living. This satire laughs at the tropes of the zombie movie, but even more at the foibles of English life today. The first half is very funny and the second half is at least witty. Buy Shaun of the Dead in the USA - or Buy Shaun of the Dead in the UK  SHAUN OF THE DEAD
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper) CAPSULE: This
film is like a crossbreeding of George Romero and Mike Leigh. Oblivious lower-middle-class
Londoners slowly become aware that the dead are returning at trying to eat the
living. This satire laughs at the tropes of the zombie movie, but even more at
the foibles of English life today. The first half is very funny and the second
half is at least witty. Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10.
Shaun and his friends from a run-down part of London live
from one dull night at the pub to the next. Shaun clerks in a store during the
day basically to get money for ale and peanuts in the evening. Shaun's girlfriend
Liz (Kate Ashfield) is tired of their relationship and of going to the pub each
night with the same friends.
It looks like he will lose her and that he is a man who has no
future anyway, so he does not notice when the civilization loses its future. What
happens is pretty much what happened in George Romero's NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD,
the dead start to come back. The cause may be a returning space probe or frankenfood
or maybe something else, but the dead start coming back to life to and eating
the living. The problem is that with the self-absorbed people
of Shaun's circle of friends and with the number of drunks usually on the street,
having flesh-eating zombies is too subtle a change to show up on Shaun's radar
screen. Oh, sure, the television is talking about some sort of nasty disaster
going on, but the telly is just sort of background noise to Shaun. He has too
many other problems of his own to figure out what the man on the telly is on about.
People staggering in the street? Well, welcome to London. But
that gag can last only so long. The film stays funny even after Shaun and his
pal and housemate Ed (Nick Frost) realize that this crisis really could be serious
enough to affect them. Where the film really damps down is in the final third.
The film references are always fun. And in a sort of scene that
has been worn out, like the killing of zombies, this film brings new humor. A
scene of Shaun and Ed in their backyard using familiar objects to fight a pair
of approaching zombies is new and funny and also characterizes Ed and Shaun.
Unlike in most zombie films, the characters are actually developed and the dialog
is good and telling. We do get to know the main characters. This is not an accident.
Most of the actors and much of the production crew worked together in the British
television comedy series "Spaced" and in SHAUN OF THE DEAD they continue the 30-something
dialog and humor of that show. Simon Pegg again stars and co-writes. Edgar Wright
again directs and this time co-writes. Several others actors are in common. (Perhaps
with the popularity of this film, that series will become available in the United
States.) There is, however, one welcome addition to the cast.
Since some people saw Bill Nighy in LOVE ACTUALLY they have been dying to know
where they could see more of this actor. Here he plays Philip, Shaun's stepfather.
As soon as you see him you know in this movie he is destined to die and become
a zombie. How could anybody put Nighy in a zombie film and not let him play a
zombie? This film brings to mind another odd take on Romero's
zombie premise. In the 2004 French film LES REVENANTS directed and co- written
by Robin Campillo the dead return as zombies who for once are benign. That film
takes a serious look at the interpersonal and social effects of having the dead
come back to life. Actually not all of the cleverness of SHAUN
OF THE DEAD should be attributed to this production. The idea that many of the
living are already zombie-like and might as well be dead really goes back to DAWN
OF THE DEAD which itself had quite a bit of humor. This comedy also is reminiscent
of the wickedly funny short DAWN OF THE NIGHT OF THE DEAD: THE MUSICAL.
SHAUN OF THE DEAD is a well-written satire taking the dead horror sub-genre of
zombie films and, well, bringing it back to life. I rate it a low +2 on the -4
to +4 scale or 7/10. Mark R. Leeper Copyright
2004 Mark R. Leeper 
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