|
|
|
IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| QUARANTINE (director/writer: John Erick Dowdle; screenwriters: Drew Dowdle/based on the film REC by Jaume Balagueró, Luiso A. Berdejo and Paco Plaza; cinematographer: Ken Seng; editor: Elliot Greenberg; cast: Jennifer Carpenter (Angela Vidal), Jay Hernandez (Jake), Columbus Short (Danny Wilensky), Greg Germann (Lawrence), Steve Harris (Scott Percival), Dania Ramirez (Sadie), Rade Sherbedgia (Yuri Ivanov), Johnathon Schaech (George Fletcher), Jeannie Epper (Old Hag); Runtime: 86; MPAA Rating: R; producer: Doug Davison/Roy Lee/Sergio Agüero; Screen Gems; 2008) |
| "The
best thing about this cheesy rip-off mockumentary-styled
horror
pic
is that I didn't catch its virus or vomit after following its shaky
developments."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz The best thing about this cheesy
rip-off mockumentary-styled
horror
pic
is that I didn't catch its virus or vomit after following its shaky
developments. This unimaginative film is lamely acted by its largely
unknown cast. It's a low-budget zombie flick that's based on the 2007
Spanish film [Rec] by
filmmakers Jaume Balaguero, Luiso A. Berdejo and Paco Plaza, which
appears to do the same things that George A. Romero’s Diary of
the Dead
(2007) does but with less oomph. Director John Erick Dowdle ("The
Poughkeepsie Tapes"/"Full Moon Rising"/"The Dry Spell") cowrites the
English version remake with his brother Drew and he makes it with a
shaky camera. The by now old hat gimmick is that there's video tape for
the viewer to see the tragedy as it was going down, which makes it
appear like a Blair-Witch-style film only with zombies. Angela
Vidal (Jennifer Carpenter) is an ambitious rookie TV reporter on the
local program called "Night Shift" and is assigned with her cameraman
Scott
(Steve Harris) to cover a Los Angeles
fire-fighting team (Jay Hernandez & Johnathon Shaech) handle the
night shift. The TV people tag along to a downtown apartment
building, with police already at the scene, to witness the rescue of a
mentally disturbed shrieking elderly woman trapped inside. Scott's
camera is constantly running and captures the gruesome details as
things go weird. When trying to escape from the building, the TV and
fire-fighter teams find themselves trapped in the sealed off building
the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) quarantined because of a
mysterious infection that is spreading--which turns the infected into flesh-eating
zombies. It's
getting tiresome seeing the same device used so many times for gory
horror pics not worth a wooden nickel, as its banal familiarity breeds
contempt while its jittery camera can actually make you sick. REVIEWED ON 4/26/2010 GRADE: C- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |