Survival of the Dead

Movie Information

The Story: Fleeing to an island to get away from the zombie epidemic, a ragtag group of individuals find themselves in the midst of not just more zombies, but a feud over what to do with them. The Lowdown: Slicker than Diary of the Dead, but more flippant in tone, this sixth George A. Romero zombie picture delivers the requisite gore and works better than many claim it does.
Score:

Genre: Zombie Horror
Director: George A. Romero
Starring: Alan Van Sprang, Kenneth Welsh, Kathleen Munroe, Devon Bostick, Richard Fitzpatrick
Rated: R

Sometimes I think George A. Romero exists solely for the purpose of giving fans of the subgenre he invented someone to beat up. It started quietly with Day of the Dead (1985), which was merely deemed a disappointment by comparison with Dawn of the Dead (1978). Then Romero waited 20 years to come out with Land of the Dead, which was an occasion for pointing out that the old boy wasn’t what he used to be. But that was nothing compared to the ire invoked by Diary of the Dead (2007). Now we have Survival of the Dead, which has resulted in the heaping of even more coals on Romero’s bloodied head.

Maybe it’s due to the fact that Romero’s brand of shambling, gut-munching monsters never struck me as particularly exciting or important in the first place, but I mostly enjoyed this newest entry. I don’t really understand some of the criticism against it. Why waffle at the believability of an island off the coast of Delaware inhabited by stage-Irish-accented knockoffs of feuding Hatfields and McCoys, but not bat an eye over a premise where dead folks get up and lurch around trying to eat the living? Did this island suddenly make the whole thing unbelievable? If I can buy the zombies, the island isn’t a hard sell. Is the CGI as good as it should be? No. But except for the zombie heads on sticks, it didn’t strike me as distractingly bad.

Viewers who were turned off by the deliberately digital look of Diary of the Dead will be pleased to find that Romero has here utilized the Red One Camera and produced a film that looks like a movie instead of a video. The shaky-cam work of Diary is also absent, which isn’t surprising, since that was a specific style (or adaptation of it) that was suited to the one film. Unfortunately, also absent is the unsettling tone of Diary, which made it one of the most interesting of Romero’s zombie films. What we’re left with in terms of thematic content is a reasonably effective commentary on the politics of divisiveness for its own sake. (The film’s final image is very strong in this regard.) What we’re left with otherwise is a different matter.

Romero here offers a zombie film that almost seems like a catalog of zombie movies from the post-Night of the Living Dead (1968) era. He has crafted a scenario that reduces the concept to its bare minimum by moving the bulk of the action to the island setting, creating a microcosm of zombiedom—and humanity. The idea of feuding Irish clans—one side out to eradicate the zombies, the other wanting to contain and possibly domesticate them—may be goofy, but it serves the film’s purpose well enough.

Since this is a Romero zombie picture, it has to deal in a requisite amount of gore, entrails ingestion and carnage—and it’s effective at this. Romero seems to enjoy finding new ways to undo the undead. There’s been some complaining about the jokiness of it all, but really, apart from a very unfortunate bit where a zombie cocks his head and goes, “Huh?” (like a cartoon dog just before dynamite explodes in his face), it’s no more jokey than things Romero’s been throwing in since 1978. That there’s a certain blasé attitude on the part of the humans as concerns encountering these monsters is only to be expected at this point. When the film calls for it—as in the ferryboat sequence and the climax—Romero plays it with a straight face and proves himself perfectly capable of crafting an effective horror set piece.

Survival of the Dead is either a 70-year-old filmmaker offering a kind of absurdist compendium of the themes and events of his entire zombie cycle, or a 70-year-old filmmaker out of ideas and spinning his wheels. I’m inclined to believe it’s the former, and I think time will vindicate the film as Romero’s oeuvre is reassessed over the years. It will never be a great film (I don’t think any of Romero’s zombie films are), but it will be seen in a different light than it is now by its detractors. Rated R for strong zombie violence/gore, language and brief sexuality.

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About Ken Hanke
Head film critic for Mountain Xpress from December 2000 until his death in June 2016. Author of books "Ken Russell's Films," "Charlie Chan at the Movies," "A Critical Guide to Horror Film Series," "Tim Burton: An Unauthorized Biography of the Filmmaker."

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2 thoughts on “Survival of the Dead

  1. WEBSHERIFF

    WEB SHERIFF
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    Tel 44-(0)208-323 8013
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    websheriff@websheriff.com
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    Hi Ken,

    On behalf of Magnolia Pictures / Magnet and the movie’s producers and director, many thanks for plugging George A. Romero’s “Survival of the Dead” … .. thanks also, on behalf of the distributors and producers, for not posting links to any pirate copies of “Survival of the Dead” on this site… .. and if you / your readers want good quality, non-pirated, previews, then the official, red-band trailer is available for fans and bloggers to post / host / share etc via the official site at http://www.magnetreleasing.com/survivalofthedead … .. for further details of on-line promotions for this movie and Magnolia / Magnet releases generally, check-out http://www.magpictures.com and their official YouTube channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/MagnoliaPictures, along with IGN’s entry for the movie at http://uk.movies.ign.com/objects/142/14286833.html.

    Thanks again for your plug.

    Regards,

    WEB SHERIFF

  2. Dan Doogan

    I enjoyed it more than Diary – but that’s not saying much. I was really struck by the horrid dialogue in this one. Every line is either a bad pun, or someone reciting a line that a different character had already said earlier for dramatic effect. I know fanboys say the dialogue in Day and Dawn was nothing to write home about – but it was never as bad as this. The highlight of the movie is Muldoon’s borderline religious motivation to keep the dead alive. Like Romero’s skewering of the Bush agenda in Land, he injects some cheeky satire here that I wish there had been more of. In addition to a dialogue polish, the film needed some more gore and more lumbering deadheads.

    C

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