Overall: Granted, the last zombie movie I watched was Shaun of the Dead (and before that the original Night of Living Dead), so I may not know what to expect, but Zombieland begins with a giddy,
Placement: to present any depth, it definitely puts a face, name and words to the mass of unemployed and exploited Americans. Tracing some history, although without much citation, Moore demonstrates how Reagen, as a tool of banks and the wealthy, planted the seeds of collapse, and manages to tie in every one of his previous films into one package. At times Michael
Infrastructure: Granted, the last zombie movie I watched was Shaun of the Dead (and before that the original Night of Living Dead), so I may not know what to expect, but Zombieland begins with a giddy, snappy energy, that soon dissipates where long stretches feel more like a teenage road movie than horror-comedy flick. More
Faculty: definitely puts a face, name and words to the mass of unemployed and exploited Americans. Tracing some history, although without much citation, Moore demonstrates how Reagen, as a tool of banks and the wealthy, planted the seeds of collapse, and manages to
Hostel: Delivery than Evil Dead 2. The highlights come from the surprise cameo and Woody Harrelson’s pursuit of zombie kill of the week, everything that doesn’t include either of these can be fast forwarded without missing much. The running list of rules is a nice touch, but