During the
weekend I decided to watch World War Z. I have read the book, and let
me just say the book is as good as the film is bad. Which is to say
the book (written by Max Brooks, son of Mel Brooks) is damn good.
The
following post is stuffed with SPOILERS, just so you know.
My first
reaction when I watched the trailer was one of real disappointment.
One of the key features of the book is that the zombies are slow.
They even reference the Romero
movies (Dawn of the Dead etc.) to give the reader the right image.
In
the movie they are fast
zombies, a la 28 Days. So what, you ask? So everything, I reply! This
changes the entire plot, from the focus to the execution.
In
the novel, Gerry collects and correlates survivor stories after
WWZ is over. The narrative goes from outbreak to reclamation, and
illustrates how it happened, what didn't work and why it didn't, and
finally how the earth was slowly an painfully taken back from the
shambling hordes.
Every
chapter focuses on different people in various parts of the world,
from an Indian general to a Japanese otaku. From American families
just trying to survive to Russian zealots hunting the dead.
Mr.
Brooks also illustrates brilliantly how ineffective modern weapons
are against a gargantuan horde of zombies who can't be hurt or
demoralized. You have to destroy the brain to kill them, making
things like land mines useless. I loved the part where an economic
formula is developed to calculate the acceptable cost of killing one
zombie, where one bullet per kill is too expensive to make recovery
possible.
Now
in the movie, Brad Pitt goes on an international
run-away-from-zombies tour, only to discover a surprisingly easy
solution to the entire problem. Easy but ridiculous. Since they
changed the style of zombie, the book no longer works, and you are
stuck with a pretty generic movie featuring rage zombies.
Stylistically
the film looks great, it truly does, but that's the only good thing I
can say about it. Even an actor as good as Brad can't salvage this.
All the scenes with his family are wooden and feels unreal, which
means that they become annoying rather than gripping. The only reason
I didn't want Gerry (Pitt) to die, was because that would have made
him the great Martyr, and this film has enough cliches as it is.
Every
once in a while, particularly in the beginning, they throw little
moral lessons at you, as if to say “Look, we're making statements
about humanity here”. The helpful junkie & the uncaring cop,
the Israelis and Palestinians living side by side etc etc. This does
nothing for the movie what so ever, it only bogs it down with more
useless scenes.
Then
we come to the dumbest part: the last half hour.
Gerry
is in a plane crash on his way to a W.H.O. Center in Wales. Apart
from himself, the only survivor is an Israeli soldier who helped him
get on the plane in the first place. (A zombie, a hand grenade and
explosive decompression took care of all the other passengers).
As
Gerry comes to, we see that a bit of metal has been run all the way
through his gut. The soldier he's with, had her hand chopped off in
Israel, but despite these horrific injuries, both make it to the
W.H.O. Center! No shock, no blood loss, no lying down and screaming.
Oh no, you see, they're heroes!
Once
at the center, Gerry is unconscious for three days and after that, he
only expresses mild discomfort when he wakes up. Hours later he's
running around bashing in zombie brains with no sign of pain at all.
After having his gut impaled? Riiiiight...
Finally
the reason he went to Wales in the first place. Gerry-boy has figured
out that the undead, and yes, the zombies are undead,
not just rabid humans, avoid attacking seriously sick humans! Really?
I guess they magically sense this while sprinting around.
So
of course he's put in a position where he has to randomly choose a
disease and inject himself with it to avoid the zombies. And of
course it works, and of course humanity is saved. And no, he didn't
choose Ebola by mistake...
End
with joyful scene where he is reunited with his boring family. The
End, thankfully.
In
conclusion, they've taken a well written, thoughtful book and turned
it into a boring, generic and pointless action movie.
World
War Z could have been a great TV series. It's pretty much already
written as one, but no, we get a bland rehash instead.
Technically
well made – apart from all the jagged action scenes that are so en
vogue these days – but if you're going to watch this, turn off all
expectations first. There are many more “What? Really?” scenes
that I haven't mentioned, but I'm sure you get the point.
Just
read the book instead.
1 comment:
Have to do some shameless self promotion here:
http://blog.uplink.fi/2013/10/world-war-z.html
It was pretty crappy, wasn't it?
Post a Comment