Sunday 3 March 2013

Mini-Review: Zombi 3 (aka. Zombie Flesh Eaters 2)

From http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mbrkdqC2jW1rr58b6o1_500.jpg


Dir. Lucio Fulci and Bruno Mattei
Italy

The original Zombie Flesh Eaters (Zombi 2) is far from the best film from Italian director Lucio Fulci, but with its atmosphere and music, it is still effecting and understandably his best known film. Zombi 3 is the creation of pure redundancy; Fulci was stuck making low budget horror films, despite the great virtues of the ones from the early eighties, but what’s significant about this one is that he became ill and had only filmed forty to seventy minutes of the final footage, leaving it be finished by scriptwriter Claudio Fragasso and, in the still warm director’s chair, Bruno Mattei, the creator of Strike Commando (1987). Even before that, researching a bit more about the film, it may have been the case that Fulci thought Fragasso’s script was awful and got into arguments with him about changing passages of it. About a zombie breakout caused by a military made virus, it shows brief moments of Fulci’s older films, of green lighting and quiet tension, but Zombi 3 is ultimately painful in how characterless it is, Mattei apparently turning the film into a virus movie with the military, and with Fragasso not helping the circumstances of this film’s origins either. One has to ask whether the fall of Italian genre cinema, alongside the increased power of television in entertainment, was also to do with both directors willingly, to keep up with the fads of the period, stripping away the gothic or idiosyncratic personalities to their filmmaking, and letting individuals like Mattei and Fragasso, just from this film, being anywhere near a movie production. It would explain why Zombi 3 feels like the kind of churned out junk released in this period.

It has plenty of ridiculous, go-for-broke ideas in vast contrast to the ominous first film – explosions, flying zombie heads, a scene with a pregnant woman, and most bizarrely, undead birds, not unsettling in the way shown in Fulci’s own Manhattan Baby (1982) or Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds (1963), but closer to the Mexican-Spanish René Cardona Jr. film Birds of Prey (aka. Beaks: The Movie) (1987), where you are not even safe from canaries and pigeons. It doesn’t affect you at all however, far too incongruous in connection to the utterly generic plot involving the military being evil and wiping out even innocent people to keep the virus contained. The obnoxiously obvious environmental message that you have to put up with as well may be sorely blamed on Claudio Fragasso; if this is how his scriptwriting and directorial work is like in general, then his infamous film Troll 2 (1990), supposedly an important work on vegetarianism, is going to be a painful clusterfuck upon viewing it (if you the reader forgive me for the foul language). The complete lack of any form of logic in Zombi 3, where some zombies talk, some are mindless, others can have their severed heads float in the air from a refrigerator, makes this dread worse, that and make you wonder where one character managed to get a flamethrower from even if it’s in a hotel cleared out by a military clean-up team. At least with something like A Cat From The Brain (1990), which was a later film Fulci had control of, there was an attempt at something unconventional, with a logic to its abstractness, for horror filmmaking. This is the kind of colourless filmmaking that puts people off genre cinema’s potential, a lifeless, woodenly dubbed work that is paced like a procrastinating snail despite the gunfights. While I have gained a lot from the first two Demons films and StageFright (1987), I am very worried about diving into late eighties Italian genre cinema and finding it as insipid as this was in general. That and the atrocious hair metal with a reverb echo that has been stuck in my brain since viewing it.

From http://wtf-film.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/0052.jpg

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