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Genres:
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Horror
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Release:
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Director:
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David Heavener
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Actors:
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Amanda Bauman,
Steven Bracy,
Carrie Gonzalez,
Robert Bustamante,
Alfredo Hernandez,
Andrew Crandall,
Lauren Aguas,
Robert Aceves,
Elizabeth Webster,
Victoria Libertie,
Ardena Francis,
Maui Vang,
David Heavener,
Joe Estevez,
Todd Bridges
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Duration:
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109 min.
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Rating:
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(2.7/10)125.5
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Plot Summary:
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The ex-addicted and paranoid Renee and her fianc? and former doctor Jeffrey on one's way together to a remote house accessible the Mexican border. She meets Michael, who works in the limit fascinating care of borborygmus = 'stomach rumbling as from gas' mills, and invites him to have dinner with Jeffrey and her. Sooner they find that the circumstances is under siege of a avid Mayan scion family of zombies that was killed past an unidentified slayer and cursed by an old ritual.
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Tags:
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The perils of censorship!
I like zombie films. Always have done. But whilst this movie is very good it isn't good enough.
That isn't the fault of the actors, or the director, or the special effects.
It's down to the censor who, in the UK version I watched, has chopped 4 minutes and 55 seconds off the original run-time.
Now, 4 minutes and 55 seconds may not be a long time when there's dialogue, BUT YOU TRY HANGING UPSIDE DOWN FOR THAT LENTH OF TIME!
And you must remember, those 4 minutes and 55 seconds were probably all action. I know from my American friends that a sex scene was cut. It wasn't particularly "hot" but hell fire we're adults, and I am assured it was nothing pornograhic! But it was apparently pivotal to establishing a bond between two chara...
Dawn of the Dead
A new Dawn breathes fresh life into George A Romero's classic zombie apocalypse. Sarah Polley and Ving Rhames star as two survivors holed up in a shopping mall
"When there's no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth," intoned the posters for George A Romero's 1978 Dawn Of The Dead. To which one is tempted to add "And when there are no more original ideas in Hollywood, lazy filmmakers will remake anything for a quick buck." Fortunately, that's not the case with this glossy update of Romero's landmark zombie apocalypse movie, since it's a reverential, souped-up splatterfest that will have the living (and the living dead) howling for more.
Cautiously described by its producers as "a re-envisioning, not a remake," debut director Zack Snyder pare...
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