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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| CRAZIES, THE (director: Breck Eisner; screenwriters: Ray Wright/Scott Kosar/based on the film by George A. Romero; cinematographer: Maxime Alexandre; editor: Billy Fox; music: Mark Isham; cast: Timothy Olyphant (Sheriff David Dutton), Radha Mitchell (Dr. Judy Dutton), Joe Anderson (Russell Clank), Danielle Panabaker (Becca Darling), John Aylward (Mayor Hobbs); Runtime: 101; MPAA Rating: R; producers: Michael Aguilar/Dean Georgaris/Rob Cowan; Overture Films; 2010) |
| "A
bland and uninspiring remake
of the 1973 George
Romero’s original."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A bland and uninspiring
remake of
the 1973 George Romero’s original
‘The Crazies’ is directed
by Breck Eisner
("Sahara," one of Hollywood's biggest critical and BO
flops of the last
few years), as a slicker and dumber zombie tale. He's
the son of the
former Disney head Michael
Eisner. It's written by Ray Wright
and Scott
Kosar, who keep it humorless, apolitical (never
getting their hands
dirty trying to explain an obvious political
situation) and much too
darkly serious for its own good. The execution of this
B film is
clunky, the scares are minimal despite the gore and
there are too many
missed opportunities to say something meaningful, but
even worse is
that the plot lays there without an explanation for
the sudden
appearance in the first scene of the bloodthirsty
zombies until the
final minutes just prior to the climax. Even then the
explanation for
all this nonsense is nonsensical, as there are many
details that could
have been better explained. In
the friendly small-town farming community of Ogden
Marsh, Iowa, the
earnest sheriff, David
Dutton (Timothy
Olyphant), his
dedicated pregnant town physician
wife, Dr.
Judy (Radha
Mitchell),
her assistant Becca (Danielle
Panabaker) and, David's loyal redneck
deputy, Russell
Clank (Joe
Anderson, English actor), try to lead a small band
of uninfected
locals to safety in nearby Cedar Rapids while trying
to fend off on
their own the hostile masked army and attacking
zombies. We learn
eventually that the government accidentally released a
bioengineered virus into the water supply that caused a
violent
insanity among those who come into contact with the
airborne germ. The
government's response to their fatal screw-up is to have
the military
seal off the town in a quarantine
and
round-up everyone in order to eliminate them. The fun is watching all the
hearty
law abiding citizens become violent zombies with blank
stares and in
the different ways they are killed off as they become
dangerous. But I
didn't think that was fun, so I overreacted to this
tedious zombie film
in a negative way (I was upset that the zombies just
didn't look that
terrifying, but more like cornfed farmers on a bad
trip). It was just
too inane, too familiar and too poorly conceived to have
much of a cult
upside. REVIEWED ON 3/11/2010 GRADE: C- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |