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Zombie poster

ZOMBIE

Dawn of the Dead

1978 IT HMDB
septembre 2, 1978

Des morts-vivants assoiffés de sang ont envahi la Terre et se nourrissent de ses habitants. Un groupe de survivants se réfugie dans un centre-commercial abandonné. Alors que la vie s'organise à l'intérieur, la situation empire à l'extérieur.

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CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini

Un mal inconnu se propage dans le monde, ressuscitant les morts et les transformant en zombies affamés de chair humaine. Toute personne mordue par ces morts-vivants contracte la même "maladie". En peu de temps, l'épidémie se répand comme une traînée de poudre, et les zones urbaines, grouillant de zombies, deviennent les endroits les moins sûrs. Trois hommes et une femme décident alors de fuir les villes et trouvent refuge dans un immense centre commercial abandonné en périphérie. Ils le transforment en un bunker imprenable pour les "morts-vivants", mais pas pour les humains. Une bande de criminels, désireuse de s'emparer des provisions encore présentes dans le centre commercial, attaque le refuge, détruisant les protections. Désormais, les zombies peuvent également entrer, déclenchant un massacre dont seuls deux survivants sortiront vivants. Réalisé par le grand Romero, qui avait réinventé le mythe des zombies en 1968 avec "La nuit des morts-vivants", et co-produit et présenté en Italie par Dario Argento, le film est un chef-d'œuvre pour les amateurs de cinéma d'horreur : tension, délire, angoisse, dégoût, gore extrême, action, peur. Mais "Zombi" ne s'arrête pas là : le film de Romero véhicule également un message politique clair, une critique d'un modèle de société américain basé sur le consumérisme et le capitalisme. Le choix de situer l'intrigue dans un centre commercial n'est pas anodin : dans cet immense bâtiment, les protagonistes trouvent non seulement un refuge temporaire contre la mort, mais aussi une sorte de "bastion" de la civilisation, attirant les morts-vivants comme de nombreux "consommateurs obtus". À l'extérieur, la société telle qu'ils la connaissaient s'effondre inévitablement sous l'assaut d'une force inattendue et apparemment inexplicable (les zombies), prête à renverser l'ordre établi et à régner enfin (libre) dans un chaos total et frénétique. Les magnifiques effets de maquillage sont l'œuvre du maître des effets spéciaux Tom Savini, qui apparaît également dans le film en tant qu'acteur, jouant l'un des motards attaquant le supermarché. La bande-son est signée par les légendaires Goblin, alors célèbres dans le monde entier pour la splendide musique de "Profondo rosso". Une dernière curiosité : Romero lui-même fait une brève apparition au début du film dans le rôle du directeur de la chaîne de télévision. Regardez la bande-annonce de ZOMBI.

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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (4)

talisencrw

9 /10

This is one of the finest sequels ever, in that it's both of comparable quality with the original, yet is fundamentally different from it at the same time. Marvelous stuff, with aspects copied thousands of times over the past two generations, with no end in sight.

This and 'Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom', from about the same time frame, would make one of the best double-bills ever on the evils of consumerism gone rampant...

Wuchak

Wuchak

8 /10

Romero’s imaginative and thrilling zombie sequel

A decade after the excellent “Night of the Living Dead” (1968), writer/director George Romero offers up this exceptional sequel. The plague of reanimated corpses with a hunger for warm flesh is now global and society is increasingly breaking down. A television exec (Gaylen Ross), her helicopter-reporter beau (David Emge) and two SWAT officers (Ken Foree and Scott Reiniger) take refuge in a suburban mall. Unfortunately for them, a veritable army of biker-raiders wants the mall for their own.

One of the main reasons this film is so iconic is because Romero seriously considered what it would be like after a ‘zombie apocalypse’ and came up with an inspired story. While the bleakness of the situation is addressed there’s also a sense of adventurous freedom; for instance, the protagonists having an entire mall to themselves.

The movie’s disturbing, ghastly and gory, but also action-packed and sometimes humorous. The zombies make for good bullet fodder while, at the same time, satirizing consumer society. The creative score is varied and I’m sure it was cutting edge at the time, but it’s very dated today, although you’ll probably find yourself acclimating to it. The no-name cast is convincing with the towering Foree standing out while Emge comes across as a poor man’s Donald Sutherland.

The movie runs 2 hours, 7 minutes with the longer version running 2 hours, 19 minutes (the one I watched). It was shot in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, and nearby Pittsburgh.

GRADE: A-

JPV852

JPV852

8 /10

Been a while since I last watched this one, but with the new 4K UHD out, decided to give it another watch going with the Extended Cut. Still very well made with some great zombie effects and really liked the characters, Peter (Ken Foree), especially. I'm not a big fan of the zombie horror genre but this is one of the exceptions. 4.0/5

Filipe Manuel Neto

Filipe Manuel Neto

1 /10

This must be some kind of joke, right?

Firstly, allow me to clarify: I am not a fan of “zombie” films, although I understand very well the interest that, in recent years, there has been for this material. I totally respect those who enjoy it. But let's be honest: a film has to have some aesthetic quality and some good taste to become “digestible”. And, well, I just finished watching this film, and I honestly can't understand how it has survived without ending up in the vault of oblivion. There are incredibly better films that have been forgotten as the years pass, but a certain type of crap, purely and simply because it's bad, lives on.

The plot is essentially based on a moment of chaos in which the USA (the rest of the world does not exist) is taken over by zombies and no one knows what to do or where to go. Everyone thinks of themselves, saves their own skin and that's it. In the meantime, the usual opportunists take advantage of the situation as they see fit, and a small group of “surviving heroes” look for somewhere to take shelter. It's the plot of this film and a dozen other disaster films (zombies, volcanoes, wars, earthquakes, alien invasions, you name it). The level of originality is below zero, and the situations are all predictable and highly cliché. We know who is going to die and who is going to be saved by a whisker, and the fact that the film starts without any kind of introduction is just confusing and a little stupid.

Directed by George A. Romero, a man who must have suffered from some bizarre sexual fetish with dead people and zombies (look at his filmography!), the film is absolutely trash and could compete in poor quality and bad taste with all of Ed's films Wood and with the historical rigor of Ridley Scott's period films. I lost count of the script problems, continuity errors and gross editing errors. The cinematography is ugly, there is a blatant exaggeration of the sets and the zombies' makeup is so obviously fake that they look like what we did at fifteen in school plays. And we'd better not even talk about the cast: I have doubts whether those people were actors.

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