The Dead Don't Die

  • New Zealand The Dead Don't Die (more)
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In the sleepy small town of Centerville, something is not quite right. The moon hangs large and low in the sky, the hours of daylight are becoming unpredictable and animals are beginning to exhibit unusual behavior. No one quite knows why. News reports are scary and scientists are concerned. But no one foresees the strangest and most dangerous repercussion that will soon start plaguing Centerville: The Dead Don't Die - they rise from their graves and savagely attack and feast on the living - and the citizens of the town must battle for their survival. (Cannes Film Festival)

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Trailer 1

Reviews (12)

Filmmaniak 

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English This is an experimental, intellectually-ironic zombie film from a director who despises standard commercial zombie films, and that’s exactly the way it looks. Deliberately throwing away the rules of the zombie genre and overturning conventions and stereotypes sounds petulant rather than innovative, and the result is a purely anti-entertaining and random-acting film with a deliberately sloppy screenplay full of repetitions and unused characters that only accomplishes exhausted and shallow social satire and a few meta-jokes. What’s more, the film’s pace is slower than the shuffling gait of the wheezing undead, focusing on viewers who will never watch it in most cases because of its chosen theme. ()

POMO 

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English Jarmusch wrote the characters to fit his iconic cast, letting them make off-base comments and humorously react to what we know from zombie movies. Accompanied by mystical guitar riffs such as those used in Dead Man, but at a slightly brisker pace, with the forester Tom Waits observing the end of the world from a distance, a pure zombie role for Iggy Pop, who washes down the freshly bitten off bloody guts of a housekeeper with coffee from her coffee machine, not forgetting the passion and broad knowledge of young genre geeks. There is nice buddy chemistry between the cop duo of Murray and Driver, who represent two generations of Jarmuschian dramedy heroes. A pleasant chill-out movie with surprisingly full-fledged gore, The Dead Don’t Die is not groundbreaking in any respect, but still offers a refreshing take on well-used tropes. For the stalwart Jarmusch fans who once pursed their lips at the “commercialism” of Night on Earth, it will be another on of Jim’s “breaks”. I’m not sure, though, if it’s going to earn anything for Universal in the multiplexes - the body count is abundant and the CGI high-quality, but the popcorn-devouring youth might still find the whole movie overly traditional and not dynamic enough, while Jarmusch fans just don’t go to multiplexes. [Cannes] ()

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Goldbeater 

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English As long as Jim Jarmusch is pouring all sorts of pop culture references to classic horror (and other) movies and filmmakers into his work, he is knowingly winking at modern trends (like the WUPS delivery company), or almost breaks down the fourth wall between the viewer and what is going on in the movie, it is frankly hilarious. However, if the audience asked Jim for some interestingly written and compelling characters or a plot that makes at least a little sense, they would be disappointed. Not to mention that J.J. recapitulates the "Romero" critique of consumerist society too literally - over and over again. The Dead Don't Die is definitely an entertaining movie you can have a good time with at the movie theater, but there is no miracle here this time, and I had such high hopes with Jarmusch. ()

Stanislaus 

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English The Dead Don't Die is my second encounter with Jim Jarmusch after Coffee and Cigarettes, and I have to say that I didn't find the director to my liking in this case either. From the start, the atmosphere of a small, sleepy town in the middle of nowhere is built up quite decently, and to the sounds of the country hit “The Dead Don't Die”, we are introduced to the various inhabitants, with everything slowly but surely leading up to the terrifying invasion of the undead. I thought the film would be laced with floor-to-ceiling black humour, but I found most of the jokes and morbid innuendo dull – the scene that amused me the most was the first zombie attack and the Chardonnay-loving woman beyond the grave. Even the slight allusion to Adam Driver's involvement in Star Wars and the fact that he was driving a Smart Car didn't help matters much. Of all the characters, I was most taken with the mysterious Tilda Swinton, though the ending of her line was very bizarre. I'm sorry, but the (obviously present) charm of Jarmusch's latest effort missed me by a large margin. ()

D.Moore 

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English “Cooofffeee..." A great comedy, but it’s certainly not for everyone. Jarmusch doesn't deny himself, and so the humor is drier than dry, but if you're on his wave, it's irresistible at the same time, and from start to the very end, the film offers one opportunity after another to burst out in laughter. Bill Murray and Adam Driver are absolutely amazing, and the apathy with which everyone involved approaches both the causes and consequences of the zombie apocalypse is irresistible, just like Iggy Pop as the best undead character that a film screen has ever hosted. ()

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