Land Of The Dead Review
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PixieOfDoom's Review of Land Of The Dead
18th Oct 2005
Overall Rating
- Where Did You See It?Cinema
- Starring Actor/ActressDennis Hopper, John Leguizamo
Land of the Dead is an ambitious movie that ultimately manages to fail in most of its aims.
Superfically it's the 4th in George Romero's zombie movies. Mankind has been all but eliminated and is forced to live in walled cities and make raids on the small towns which were abandoned years before to get supplies. There is no mention of what will happen when they run out of towns to raid.... The rich live in great luxury while the poor subsist on scraps and are kept happy with "bread and circuses."
Unfortunately the zombies are starting to become sentient and learn to use tools and weapons just as the most powerful weapon in the city's arsenal is stolen by an unhappy minion....
Ok, it's a zombie movie, but the zombies are extraneous to the plot which is more about the relationship between the rich and poor in a post-apocalyptic society. Dennis Hopper plays a creepy gangster cum leader and John Leguizamo is always convincing but there is no motivation for any character in this film. Why would Leguizamo destroy an entire city because he can't get the apartment he wants? His character is neither crazy nor evil so his actions make no sense. Why is Riley, the good guy, so good? Why does he do his job? Why does he want to leave? Why does the female lead suddenly decide to help Riley out? What's in it for her? Nothing.
Then there's the political threads. The zombies do make an effective symbol in that Romero uses them to suggest that anyone who has may one day not have - e.g. anyone can sustain a bite. There's a suppressed revolutionary group who want Riley to help them so that wealth can be more evenly distributed but they warrant about 2 minutes of screen time. Why even write it into the plot if you're not going to use it?
Romero started out with some interesting ideas but completely fails to explore them. The organized zombies, not explained. The ability of humans to sustain themselves for years without means of planting crops, manufacturing, etc. - not explained, yet some people do live in vast luxury just like before. The motivations of the characters - not there. The development of various plot threads, noon-existent.
Don't get me wrong, it was an entertaining 90 minutes of film, but it wasn't very scary, and it just left me wondering where the other half of the story went.
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