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Highlander goes gaga over SHAUN OF THE DEAD!

Published at:  Apr 03, 2004 3:05:41 PM CST

Hey folks, Harry here... This film will be being released by Focus Films... and it will be a force of nature that will sweep over the world of film buffs unlike anything in years. Fansites will emerge, you'll do things with a dart you never thought you would do. And everyone, everywhere will carry a cricket bat. You will see...




I went to last night’s screening of Shaun of the Dead with a fairly open mind, considering how much a healthy diet of ‘Spaced’ features in our flat. I was childishly excited at the fact that Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, the two lead actors of both Spaced and Shaun of the Dead were holding a Q&A afterwards. I knew that there would be far less references for filmophiles in SotD than Spaced but enough to leave us satisfied. I wasn’t disappointed. The story centres around Shaun and his pals in suburban London. His relationship with his girlfriend is rapidly falling to pieces, his best mate, Ed, is sleeping on his sofa, in between smoking dope and going to the pub, his flat mate is a tosser, his step dad Phil (Bill Nighy who looks undead anyway) is a weirdo and his job sucks. And then the zombies arrive. In fact they’re pretty much everywhere before Shaun even notices. (Pegg noted at the Q&A that a large part of the film was taking a dig at the impersonal feel of London). He walks past half a dozen of them on his way to the shops the morning after a huge piss up with Ed, refusing to give spare change to one in particular. After their first encounter with a zombie who they think is simply a very drunk regular at the pub wandering around the garden, they take flight to rescue Shaun’s mum (Penelope Wilton from BBC’s prim and proper Ever Decreasing Circles. Genius casting!), who Ed seems to have a thing for. Oh yeah, and Phil’s been bitten by a zombie.

After plenty of quality nonsense and discovering that you have to bash zombies heads in to kill them, they head off to pick up Shaun’s girlfriend and her flat mates "A failed actor and a twat", as she puts it. The plan is to take shelter in the pub. And why not? The trouble is getting there. On route they have to bash more zombie heads, take acting lessons on how to "achieve the zombie look" and blend in with a swarm of the undead. After holing up in the pub, it’s Alamo time with much head mashing, dart throwing, pint drinking and battering the zombie landlord to Queen’s ‘Don’t stop me now’ with pool cues. Some die, some live, you’ll find out when you see it. The aftermath of the zombie rampage is one of the funniest bits in the film, in which through flicking the t.v. channels we see zombie game shows, talk shows and government run schemes employing zombies. Basically, I laughed from start to finish. Whether it was Ed deliberately ploughing do! wn zombies in Phil’s Jaguar or the absurdity of taking acting tips from a zombie who’s been impaled to a tree by a Swing-ball garden tennis set. The background action was hilarious especially before Shaun realises what’s going on. Zombies rampaging around with Shaun oblivious to the undead cannibalism going on around him.

I liked the Romero references and there are a fair few nods to the subsequent follow-ups. Pegg stated that he admired the creature that Romero had created, a hybrid of Mummy and Werewolf. The zombies in SotD are Romero’s. Slow, moaning and rotting with a hunger for flesh. The absurdity of the prospect of a British zombie rom-com is appealing to the masses already and rightly so. If the British film industry kept churning out Hugh Grant movies, the planet would soon believe that Blighty is full of middle-class twats whose comedic talent is limited to mumbling the word "bugger" and expecting us to piss ourselves laughing.

With Spaced, and now Shaun of the Dead, a fresh, exciting wave of modern British comedy has been unleashed, not only featuring most of Britain’s new young comedy acting talent but the sharp eye and mind of writer-director Edgar Wright. Actor and co-writer Simon Pegg strikes me as an average guy who writes exceptional comedy about average guys. The dialogue in SotD flows with the normality of comedy banter between mates and appeals to the audience on the other side of the Hugh Grant coin. A friend of mine remarked recently that watching Spaced was like watching ourselves on t.v. It would be hard to say this about SotD, what with the zombies but there’s no denying the bond you feel with the characters simply due to the fact that, well, they’re us. They work shitty jobs (if they work at all), go to the pub too much, fight with their flat-mates and get random hangover cravings for ice creams. Even the locations and set dressing had a normal feel to! them. The film is set in suburban London and that’s what you get. No Tower of London, no Buckingham Palace, no flashy penthouse apartments, no fancy interiors. Just good old scabby normality. With plenty of zombies.

You guys will love this film. I hope it makes it across the pond. Pegg said it didn’t have a distributor yet, which is odd considering Universal have it over here. Please feel free to harass them until it’s released. You must see this film. It’s fucking hilarious, it’s clever, it’s gross, it’s fairly cool whilst incorporating the Python element of stupidity. And most importantly, it’s new British comedy. And the future looks fucking dazzling.

Highlander.



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    Readers Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 3:08:18 PM CST

    Cool.

    by stlfilmwire

    Studio 666 is coming too.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 3:24:47 PM CST

    You....Lando!

    by lord porkington

    Been waiting for this for ages now. Less than a week to go! And now SOTD is completed, that means Edgar, Simon and Jessica can get cracking on Spaced series 3! It just doesn't get any better!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 3:43:45 PM CST

    The ending

    by el bastardo

    Well thanks for telling us about zombie gameshows. That sounds like the kind of joke where half the humour is in the surprise. For future reference, dont tell us any of the ending.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 4:10:46 PM CST

    Can't wait for this

    by towers

    Really can't wait for this film, the trailers look really funny and I loved spaced. It is good that they have completed this now so they can finally give us another series of Spaced!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 4:23:09 PM CST

    Spaced was brilliant

    by bobdabuilder

    This sounds brilliant. At last, a British film that doesn't sound like every other British film ever made. Can't make the cinemas soon enough.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 5:14:30 PM CST

    you twat

    by mr j

    and then the shark comes through the back of the boat and eats quint........and willis actually is dead........you twat nice review. spoiler alert ! lol zombie gameshows ...my anger has passed hehe swing-ball

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 6:21:25 PM CST

    A third series of 'Spaced'?

    by no exit

    I'm afraid it doesn't look like it's going to happen, folks. A perusal of the 'Shaun Of The Dead' webchat at empireonline.co.uk shows that Pegg thinks a third series is unlikely, though some sort of 'Office' type special(s) might still be on the cards ... (whilst this would mean that the programme wouldn't have an opportunity to jump the shark, that was never a likely situation in any case). I'm still waiting for Mike's (sorry, can't remember the actor's name) sitcom about a park keeper. I remember him mentioning it on 'The Priory' (Channel 4 dross) years ago, and I haven't heard hide nor hair of the bugger since (that is, the sitcom, not Mike. I've seen him on the fifth channel, an unnatural place for comedy talent to be hiding).

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 03, 2004 7:00:10 PM CST

    All up in the air...

    by lord porkington

    It does look like series 3 is in the balance right now. Pegg did say on Jonathan Ross that it was probably going to happen if Edgar, Jessica and himself could all be available to write and film it all. And Channel 4 aren't daft enough to not commission a third series (unlike the BBC with anything remotely good second series of The Day Today I'll never forgive the bastards Kumars At No.42? Load of shite. Twats). But who can say? If SOTD is a big success (and I hope it is, they all deserve more recognition) then maybe Pegg would turn his back on Spaced for pastures new? But it's my dying wish that I get to see Tim, Daisy, Mike, Brian, Marsha, Twist and Colin for one last hurrah before going their separate ways. And if the new Chris Morris project is a load of fat cock then I'll need a new Spaced all the more...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 04, 2004 5:42:31 PM CDT

    More importantly; where are the british werewolf movies?

    by uncle stan

  • Apr 04, 2004 10:35:40 PM CDT

    the british werewolve movies are already here

    by yellowsamuel

    The british werewolf horror/comedy Dog Soldiers came out 2 years ago and currently has a sequel in production. It's fucking funny, very British, very gory and well worth hunting down if your a fan of British humour/horror/werewolves or gore.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 06, 2004 8:19:07 PM CDT

    Those limey fruits

    by stuntrocker

    I knew there was a reason I loved them. This movie is just fun fun fun. I love those British bastards. And Chelsea not Arsenal.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 08, 2004 11:28:57 AM CDT

    Oi Oi!

    by killbilbo

    You lacky lacky people. Iw as just mashing out to the acid tweaking funk mix of Josh Wink's 'Higher state of Consciousness' (all 11 minutes) when I happened to catch the trailer for SOTD - Look Sorted.

    Must Go. Have a Banana!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 08, 2004 6:33:28 PM CDT

    up the chelsea!

    by mrmonkeynuts

  • Apr 08, 2004 6:40:03 PM CDT

    and down with hugh grant....

    by mrmonkeynuts

    we common english folk(not british!) are tired as being portrayed as plummy voiced tossers from lala land who have hilarious japes and ride on red buses!(remember those shite friends episodes set in london with the cream of british shite and fergie? we dont drink boddingtons either,we drink stella!)
    horrah,hoorah and thrice hoorah for peggy and his glorious chums who have given us a mirror to look at where the telly or big screen used to be!
    im off to play polo and drink champers whilst watching a rerun of the boat race with those beastly cambridge blagards cheating good old oxford...
    wankers all of them!

    Reply to Talkback

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