Cannes 08: Review - Dance of the Dead
Hilarious low-budget prom-themed horror.
Dance of the Dead is a low-budget comedy horror gem playing at this year's Cannes. Already a hit at America's SXSW festival, the film takes the simple equation that 'zombies plus prom equals laughs', and runs with it for 90 minutes of pure, unadulterated fun.
The plot is as ridiculous as horror plots get, revolving around discharge from a power plant bring the residents of a local cemetery back to life. It also happens to be prom time, with the pupils of Cosa High School holding their Hawaiian Hula Dance, and when the zombiesmunch their way through much of the town and eventually reach the school, all hell, quite literally, breaks loose.
Every zombie film owe a debt to the godfather of gore, George Romero, and Dance is no different, referencing Night of the Living Dead in the opening passages, andslipping in a knowing Dawn of the Dead gag when the zombies hit a supermarket.
And yet it's very much its own beast, featuring wildly original ideas that take the genre in new and refreshing directions, from zombie frogs causing classroom carnage to zombie kids moshing at a zombie gig. Indeed, some of the scenes are truly inspired; a zombie love scenes a particular standout, and the vision of the undead leaping out of their graves on of the best of the fest thus far.
The young cast attack their roles with great enthusiasm, appearing to be the typical high school archetypes before actually turning into kids you care about. And director Greg Bishop shoots with such vim and vigour that you can't help but be carried away by the marvellous momentum of it all. The result perfect Friday night fodder; a zombie film that's a blast from start to finish, and one that should inject new life into a genre that looked to be dead on its feet.
The plot is as ridiculous as horror plots get, revolving around discharge from a power plant bring the residents of a local cemetery back to life. It also happens to be prom time, with the pupils of Cosa High School holding their Hawaiian Hula Dance, and when the zombiesmunch their way through much of the town and eventually reach the school, all hell, quite literally, breaks loose.
Every zombie film owe a debt to the godfather of gore, George Romero, and Dance is no different, referencing Night of the Living Dead in the opening passages, andslipping in a knowing Dawn of the Dead gag when the zombies hit a supermarket.

And yet it's very much its own beast, featuring wildly original ideas that take the genre in new and refreshing directions, from zombie frogs causing classroom carnage to zombie kids moshing at a zombie gig. Indeed, some of the scenes are truly inspired; a zombie love scenes a particular standout, and the vision of the undead leaping out of their graves on of the best of the fest thus far.
The young cast attack their roles with great enthusiasm, appearing to be the typical high school archetypes before actually turning into kids you care about. And director Greg Bishop shoots with such vim and vigour that you can't help but be carried away by the marvellous momentum of it all. The result perfect Friday night fodder; a zombie film that's a blast from start to finish, and one that should inject new life into a genre that looked to be dead on its feet.
on May 21 2008 11:34 AM Well I'm interested. (Reply to this) |
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on May 21 2008 12:03 PM Second that. Sounds fun. (Reply to this) |
on May 21 2008 12:59 PM Very few zombie comedies do well. It would be nice to see an addition to that list. (Reply to this) |
on May 21 2008 01:45 PM Shaun of the Dead, Re-animator, Return of the Living Dead, Evil Dead II, and Fido aren't good enough for me. (Reply to this) |
on May 21 2008 02:59 PM Well, it seems like it could end up being insufferable in the way that all comedies that think they're funnier than they are are, but the praise has at least convinced me to give it the benefit of the doubt. Though I think we should make move on from doing zombie comedies and start trying to make a serious zombie movie that's actually scary. When's the last time that was attempted? Dawn of the Dead '04? Shaun of the Dead's all the zombie comedy I'll ever need, and though I don't mind zombie comedies especially and will probably check this out when it comes out, it just seems like they're beating a dead horse. (Reply to this) |
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on May 21 2008 04:04 PM I got to see this one at SXSW and the cast and crew were there to talk about it after. Aside from it being really entertaining, those guys worked damned hard to get it made. I hope it gets picked up for distribution. (Reply to this) |
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on May 21 2008 06:52 PM sound fun. Contem, did you have a profile at the free interracial dating site--InterracialConnect.com where thousands of new members join daily to meet dream date? Did you see the video? (Reply to this) |
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on May 21 2008 07:38 PM Will this be a hit among the teens who need a weekly dosage of scares, maybe thanks to the comedy in the film it will have what recent scary movies havent got (both types) (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 03:36 PM ...Interracial dating site...? What are you like a spokesperson for them? P1SS off. Go outside and look for some real iterracial C0ck, instead of double clicking your mouse infront of the computer. Anyways yea this movie serves up a quirky yet menacing atmospehere with a few good scares and plenty of laughs. (Reply to this) |
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on Aug 12 2008 03:28 AM i don't know why but i hate zombie/comedy.... love zombie flicks, love comedy, actually i just hate horror/comedy in general... so i'll pass. (Reply to this) |
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