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Night Of The Zombies
(a.k.a. Hell Of The Living Dead)
(1981)
Director: Bruno Mattei
Cast: Margrit Evelyn Newton, Franco Giraldi, Selan Karay
Special guest review!
By Jason Alt If you are anything
like me, you relish really awful films. Films
with a plot full of more holes than the SS
Titanic. Films that will inevitably have the
word ‘Zombie’ in the title. Films that are made
in exotic countries like Turkey, India, or Kuala
Lumpur. If you are anything like me, you try
your best to find these pieces of cinematic
trash, and when you do, you take them home and
watch them for recreation! Maybe you even
invite friends over so that they can share in
the pain and suffering you so willingly inflict
upon yourself. If you
are like that, then I suggest you find a copy of
Night of the Zombies. It
will not disappoint you. The film is easily one
of the worst movies ever made (that weren’t
deliberately made badly.) The movie tries very
hard to be interesting and fresh, but it fails
at this miserably due to a formulaic plot and a
cast of un-exciting characters.
The
music in this movie is a joke. The beginning
tune does little to set a mood and would be more
at home in a video game like Final Fantasy.
Most of the songs are of a ridiculous techno
variety, and they are out of place in what
claims to be a horror movie. The person (or
thing) credited with the music for Night
of the Zombies goes by the handle
‘Goblin’,
and
that’s the only name he/it is mentioned by in
any of the credits(*). If I had composed such
inappropriate and contrived music for a bomb
like this movie, I
would probably use a pseudonym as well fearing
that Night of the Zombies
would forever tarnish my reputation. Or maybe
‘Goblin’ doesn’t have one.
The
characters should be people that you can relate
to. They should be
interesting, down-to-earth
people, and you should want things to work out
for them. But the characters in this movie fail
in that respect, and after the first half hour
you stop caring whether or not they all die. The
bulk of the characters are part of some sort of
Italian terrorist-response team. They all wear
identical royal blue jumpsuits, which are
supposed to be some sort of uniform. If we can
learn nothing else from any American crisis
response teams, we can at least learn that
pockets look cool. This is a well-known
cinematic device; if you want to make a bunch of
guys with guns look cool, you give them a lot of
pockets. The soldiers in Night of the
Zombies don’t have any pockets, so
instead of a SWAT team, they look more like some
sort of clan of disgruntled auto-mechanics with
World War 2 era weaponry.
Since the movie was made in the 1980's, surely
they could have used more technologically
advanced weaponry? In
the beginning of the film, the team enters an
American consulate in Italy. The news reporters
standing by assure the public that they are
highly trained, and equipped with ‘the most
technologically advanced weaponry’ at the same
time a group of them shuffle by the camera in
their blue jumpsuits (which function as urban
camouflage about as well as huge neon signs that
say ‘COP’) clutching Thompson machine guns, and
other ‘technologically advanced weaponry’ you
may recognize from Saving Private Ryan.
The only
thing more ridiculous than their attire is their
strategy. When they encounter a terrorist, one
soldier will point a gun at the terrorist and
say ‘drop it!’ As soon as he does, another
soldier will sneak up behind him and cut his
throat. I got the feeling while watching the
movie that these were not acceptable
rules of engagement. That doesn’t seem to bother
anyone but me, however and they continue with
their unorthodox techniques. To dispatch the
terrorists, they decide to shoot teargas into
the room where all the hostages are being held
(which has no effect on the terrorists besides
slowing their dialogue and causing them to cough
every third word or so, which makes the dialogue
seem to take about 300 times as long.) After the
teargas, they put on their (World War Two) gas
masks (which you see them put around their necks
when they are outside the building, but that
they don’t seem to have until the gas was shot
in) and, in an unprecedented display of gusto
and testosterone, proceed to kick the door open
and shoot all the terrorists in the head at a
snail’s pace. Any self-respecting terrorist
could have returned fire, but these guys must
have been to busy coughing every third word on
the tear gas.
In any
case, the men decide to take it upon themselves
fly to Papua New Guinea personally on what their
leader calls “an important mission” where they
will check out the HOPE facility. Apparently the
HOPE facility has been conducting horrible
chemical research, and the goal of the
‘terrorists’ was to get these facilities shut
down. An accident in one of these facilities has
released a ‘vapor’ (not my word, the movie's)
that turns people into zombies. The head
terrorist had, in a ten minute soliloquy
hampered by the bullet hole in his chest (and
the teargas, probably) that they were all,
“doomed to die horrible.. deaths…eaten…by
men…men like you….*cough*….all eaten.” (It goes
on for another whole minute, you get the
picture.)
It is in
Papua New Guinea that we meet the rest of the
cast of characters. A reporter, named Leia, and
her cameraman are in the area documenting the
behavior of the natives. The camera they are
using looks like it was bought at a garage sale,
but judging by the picture quality of
Night of the Zombies, it may have been
the same camera used to shoot the film.
The
characters speak most of their lines with no
conviction, and other times they begin shouting
for no apparent reason. It is not only in this
respect that the movie makes absolutely no sense
at times. I suspect that a great deal of this
movie ended up on the cutting room floor, which
is ridiculous when you consider that the movie
is only an hour and a half long (It seems more
like 7 when you are watching). For all of the
movie that must have been cut, they could have
used stock footage less. It was almost
disgusting how they abused stock footage; they
used the exact same shot of the outside of the
HOPE center in the movie 5 times! This
has to be some sort of record. It is one thing
to reuse an external shot of an important
building, but it is quite another altogether
when they reuse shots of zombies dying. In one
altercation one man shoots a zombie with a
revolver. It cuts to a shot of a zombie (with a
different face!) lowering its face and groaning
(it is an extreme close up so all you see is the
face). The very next zombie that is killed is
shot 3 times with a machine gun. It then cuts to
the exact same shot of the yellow-faced zombie.
The
whole movie is spliced together with unnecessary
nature footage. This is the straw that broke the
camel's back for me. Instead of cutting straight
from scene to scene, they think it necessary to
put a few minutes of a coyote eating a
chinchilla, or a heron diving after a fish. I am
not even sure some of the animals featured were
indigenous to Papua New Guinea, but if not, that
would not be the biggest liberty the director
took with this movie.
Some of
the dialogue is so hilariously bad it almost
makes the movie worth watching. Take, for
instance, when one genius observes “buildings
have people in them.” Spotty dialogue like this
could have something to do with the fact that it
was translated from Italian, but that is really
no excuse. Lines like “some sort of degenerative
process has begun that could be catastrophic for
everyone” make me thinks that the dialogue was
written by a team of 7th graders
trying to sound intelligent.
I wish I
could completely ignore the dialogue as well as
most of the players in the movie. One soldier
discovered the only way to kill a zombie was to
shoot it in the head. After sharing this
fascinating discovery with his colleagues, they
all celebrate by shooting the next zombie they
see in the chest about a dozen times. I lost
count of how many times they reminded each other
to aim for the head, then turned around and
wasted nearly a clip of ammunition shooting a
zombie in the chest and yelling things at him.
Really nasty insults like “Come on, you
vegetables!” or “Back, you mothers!” If the
bullets don’t work, it’s always just as
effective to destroy the zombie’s self esteem.
The
characters all seem unwilling to lend any sort
of aid to a comrade. In any scene where someone
is eaten by a zombie and there is someone else
around, they will just watch for what seems like
an entire minute. It is inevitable; someone will
be surprised by a zombie, or a zombie-rat, or a
zombie-toddler and whoever is with them will not
react at all. There are huge long minutes of
facial close-ups of the horrified looks on their
faces, but they do nothing but watch. It sounds
like human nature, but in the film it looks
ridiculous. A zombie will be chewing on someone
making a half-hearted attempt to get away while
their friends stand on and look horrified, and
the zombie will divide his time between eating
and making menacing faces at the horrified
spectators.
There
are also huge continuity errors in the movie
that aren’t explained. In the HOPE center, for
example, there is one scene when a whole team of
scientists goes down into a sector of the plant
where the “vapor” leak was discovered. The head
scientist (indicated by his white hair) is
flanked by nearly a dozen other scientists when
they encounter a zombie. The scene cuts to a
shot outside the center (a shot you will be
quite familiar with at the end of your cinematic
experience.) When it cuts back, the head
scientist is alone, in a completely different
sector of the building, and pursued by almost 15
zombies. This was never explained, but I don’t
even want to ask. He calmly strolls into his
office and makes a recording on his tape
recorder, then you never see him again. He makes
no attempt to get out the building alive. There
are dozens of other continuity errors, but I’ll
leave you the immense joy of finding them for
yourself (you may even get to watch the movie
again to find them all.)
The
movie is not completely without merit however.
It does have its good points (though they are
far outweighed by continuity errors and
unnecessary shouting.) First off, kudos to the
props department of Night of the Zombies.
Time after time they managed to create wholly
realistic fake bodies for the zombies to eat.
One particular scene features a zombie duo
squatting on the floor picking pieces of human
remains out of the chest cavity of one of their
victims. They really did a nice job with the
chunks of humans that they fed to the zombies.
Also, if
you one of those people that are willing to
forget how bad the first 45 minutes of a movie
were the second you are shown a pair of breasts
(a common device used most effectively by James
Cameron in Tit-anic.), then you
will probably get a kick out of the one scene of
gratuitous toplessness. It isn’t enough to save
the movie, but it is a noble effort, and should
be commended.
If
Night of the Zombies wasn’t
enough to whet your appetite for cheesy cinema,
the VHS edition comes complete with previews for
other cheesy films you may enjoy. It previews
The Incubus, Mortuary, The House on Sorority
Row, and my favorite, The
Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane.
This title may sound familiar to you as it did
me. This is the same movie that stars ‘Academy
Award Nominees Jodie Foster and Martin Sheen’.
Night of the Zombies is a
veritable treasure trove of movies that everyone
involved in have spent many long nights drinking
trying to forget. If you are serious about
ignoring my stern warnings and actually renting
Night of the Zombies, it is
available at some chain rental places in
America, and has been released on DVD under the
title Hell Of The Living Dead.
Don’t say I didn’t try to warn you!
* Editor's note: "Goblin" is
actually an Italian music group, one that has
provided the score for many famous horror
movies. You can see their filmography
here.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability of Goblin soundtracks
(CD)See also: Curse
Of The Cannibal Confederates,
Let Sleeping Corpses
Lie, Nightmare At
Noon
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