
By the time Zombieland reached its climax, I actually cared about who lived and died, and that reaction honestly took me by surprise. Fleischer and his screenwriters don't fumble the ball the way the filmmakers do in about 90% of comedies and horror movies by making the characters little more than animated props - punch-line targets or splatter-fodder. Each has some nice moments and an investment is made in creating bonds and relationships. Don't misunderstand - these are by no means fully realized, three-dimensional entities however, they are more than caricatures. One thing I appreciate about Zombieland is that it doesn't ignore the concept of character development. He has the best line in Zombieland - I won't reveal it here, since comments taken out of context often lose their humor, but it references Garfield. Recently, he has been appearing in so many straight and/or offbeat parts that I was beginning to wonder. It's refreshing to see Murray in this role, limited though it may be, because it reminds us he can still be very funny. He lives in a palatial mansion complete with a theater that plays Ghostbusters. The best scenes involve a cameo by Bill Murray as Bill Murray.

Occasionally, of course, there are zombies to deal with but, until the end when they arrive en masse, they're more nuisances than serious obstacles. Along the way, they bond, learn things about each other, and come to understand what they hope to get out of this screwed-up life.

Little Rock provides Tallahassee with a surrogate daughter of sorts while Columbus hopes that Wichita might be girlfriend material - not that he has parents he can bring her home to meet.Īlthough the zombie presence always exists in the background, much of the movie plays out like a traditional road trip, with four diverse individuals making their way from Texas to California, heading for a "promised land" (in this case, an amusement park) that might be a myth. They later hook up with sisters Wichita (Emma Stone) and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin), who aren't what they initially seem to be. Tallahassee is headed for Florida and has two great passions in life: kicking zombie ass and finding an edible Twinkie. He encounters the redneck zombie-killer Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson, providing his best performance in years) on the road. He's trying to get home, mainly because he hopes to see a familiar face. Whenever Columbus follows one of these rules, Fleischer helpfully prints the rule # and description on screen to remind us.ĭespite having been born in Columbus, our hero is in Texas when the action begins. Our narrator, "Columbus" (Jesse Eisenberg), who bears the name of the city from which he hails, has survived into the post apocalyptic era by following a list of 31 rules - stay in good shape (to outrun the zombies), beware of public bathrooms, always wear a seatbelt, don't be a hero, etc. By the time the movie has started, the epidemic has long since swept across the globe, infecting nearly the entire population. The zombies of Zombieland are members of the "new breed," meaning they're not self-exhumed corpses that have come back from the dead to terrorize the living, but plague victims whose brains have rotted, leaving behind violent, cannibalistic shells.

Director Ruben Fleischer, making his feature debut, and screenwriters Rhett Reese & Paul Wernick have accomplished what they set out to achieve. Zombieland is funny - sometimes very funny - and has a clever script. The production wants viewers to laugh if they leave the theater without doing so, the filmmakers have failed to do their jobs. The key with this movie, as with the others (and many more like it) is that, although there are "boo!" moments and gore, comedy always trumps horror. Films like Sam Raimi's Evil Dead II and Army of Darkness, Don Coscarelli's Bubba Ho-Tep, Michele Soavi's Cemetery Man, and (most obviously) Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg's Shaun of the Dead have paved a path that allows productions like Zombieland to make their road trips with ease. Nevertheless, the genre remains incredibly popular, so what better way to populate it than with movies that recognize the comedic potential of many staple horror situations? What was once an obscure and often derided cinematic category, the "horror comedy," has come into its own. I think the last horror movie that had me on edge may have been The Mist, and that was released two years ago. There are exceptions, of course, but those are increasingly rare. Simply put, most horror films are not scary.
