Zombieland Is Open For Business.

I havent had this much fun with the undead since 2004's Dawn of the Dead
That film had small touches of horror and took itself more seriously than Zombieland
which mixes a BIG sense of humor with horror.
Jesse Eisenberg as (Columbus) one of the last survivors of one of those viruses that has reduced mostly every human to bleeding prune faces,and human flesh eaters is very funny as a super geek.His narration throughout the film,full of self deprication,and tips on surving zombies is one of the best parts of the film
He soon hooks up with a take no prisoners,zombie killer,in search of a good Twinkie
named Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson) The banter between the two is hilarious for the most part
Adding two the fun are two sisters they encounter Wichita (Emma Stone),who's big beautiful eyes and toughness gets Columbus's virgin heart a thumping and Little Rock(Abigail Breslin Definitely trying to break free of her cute girl movie role mode)
As the four journey to a land that may be zombie free,they encounter a Hollywood star,which leads to one of the best,and funniest big screen cameos i have ever seen.
There are a few plot holes,some predictable moments,and the action slows down a bit in the middle,but like me you will likely be having so much fun you can easily ignore the flicks aforementioned missteps.
Scale of 1-10 an 8½
 
Did anyone else notice the chime from A Few Dollars More playing when Columbus and Tallahassee were having that stand off when they first met?

Thought that was a great little touch.
 
So nobody else saw the Tom Cruise zombie?

I SWEAR it was him.
 
Did anyone else notice the chime from A Few Dollars More playing when Columbus and Tallahassee were having that stand off when they first met?

Thought that was a great little touch.

I didn't mention it in this thread because I thought people might think I was tripping out. :woot:

I heard it too and was surprised, kind of neat.

Mr. Credible, which scene was this Tom Cruise zombie in? If I see this again in the theatres I want to keep an eye open.
 
I didn't mention it in this thread because I thought people might think I was tripping out. :woot:

I heard it too and was surprised, kind of neat.

Mr. Credible, which scene was this Tom Cruise zombie in? If I see this again in the theatres I want to keep an eye open.
I think he means at the end when they are in the amusement park and the two sisters are trapped on that ride.
 
Eisenberg is better than Cera, by a long shot. And has been around longer than him too. So if anyone is copying anyone, Cera is copying him.

Well whatever, Cera is way more mainstream and I've never even heard of Eisenberg, so it seemed to me like it was the other way around.

Either way his character and performance were annoying to me. :oldrazz:
 
Yea i honestly didn't enjoy Columbus's character, everyone else was great tho especially Woody :up:
 
Wichita aka Emma Stone was hot in this
 
The opening credits with For Whom The Bell Tolls got me pumped!
 
^Me too. I thought the opening credits were even better than in Watchmen.

Great fun movie. Woody awesome as usual and best cameo ever.
 
^Me too. I thought the opening credits were even better than in Watchmen.

Great fun movie. Woody awesome as usual and best cameo ever.

hey now dont get too far :hehe:

and i heard that they are in the process of getting a 2nd film
 
My long-awaited (no doubt) review:

Shouldn't we all be feeling zombied out by now? Forty-one years since George A. Romero messily birthed the modern shuffling zombie spectacle, with the creep-classic Night Of The Living Dead, and we’re still watching drooling stiffs mindlessly meandering from Day to Dawn, inspiring cheeky British parodies, sub-moronic Milla Jovovich vehicles and weirdo Jane Austen literary crossovers. I mean, after the refined Mr. Darcy has started stomping undead ass where else is there left to go?

The answer, of course, is the devastated, corpse-packed playground Zombieland, home to a truly memorable mixed bag of misfits, in director Ruben Fleischer’s colourful send-up of all things flesh-eating and decayed. In the spirit of the film’s survival rule-obsessed lead character, nick-named Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg – starring in his second great amusement park comedy of the year following April’s Adventureland), it seems fitting that Zombieland be evaluated by the same six crucial criteria that all of its re-animated ilk should be:

Rule #1: The Lead Characters Need Not Be Zombies Too!
Perhaps due to the syrupy-slow saunter of your average human-hungry assailant, it often seems like filmmakers are trying to even the odds by stock-piling entire casts of personality-deficient lobotomy-victims. After the infuriatingly hysterical mass media critics of Diary of the Dead and the hordes of generic carcass-fodder in the Resident Evil debacles, what a joy to encounter the lovable quartet of weapon-wielding eccentrics of Zombieland. We genuinely like Eisenberg’s stammering, fretful teen, Woody Harrelson’s redneck dynamo Tallahassee and cute con-artist sisters Wichita (Emma Stone) and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin), and it’s their playful interactions and bickering, not the voracious villains, which drives the film and provides it with its unexpectedly big heart. Their chemistry is so palpable that we laugh just as much at the big gags as the smaller beats, such as when Breslin patiently educates an intrigued Harrelson on the finer points of Hannah Montana.

Rule #2: With Zombies, It’s All About Location, Location, Location!
Look, there’s nothing more boring than watching the living-impaired stumble around underground bunkers and caverns. It’s been done to, er, death. The same goes for stuffy, darkened buildings and subterranean tunnels - when it comes to cannibalistic cadavers, the more recognizable and imaginative the environment, the better. Remember Dawn of the Dead’s mall complex or 28 Weeks Later’s English countryside? They were bright and wide-open, making the possibility of capture all the more horrifying and frustrating. Zombieland plays around with some fun cramped settings, such as a restroom toilet, a college-student’s apartment and a tacky souvenir store, before graduating onto a superlative after dark amusement park shoot ‘em up finale which, in crowd-stirring style, takes full advantage of every possible prop, obstacle and attraction in sight.

Rule #3: Zombies Like Brains! So Do We!
Given the proliferation of dimly assembled cheapie efforts, it’s often forgotten that zombie-fests are usually the most intelligent horror sub-genre, allowing a safe venue for incisive political and social commentaries exploring controversial subjects such as race, capitalism, post-9/11 anxiety and the injustices of the Bush-era. Although Zombieland is more interested in drawing laughs, writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick work overtime to ensure that every pop-culture reference, witty jibe and sincere moment says something about the character spouting it. Even Eisenberg’s goofy narration, which occasionally feels a little too on-the-nose in regards to the film’s emotional messages, shrewdly comments not only on the grisly events in progress, but also the aspects of zombie-lore being referenced and subverted.

Rule #4: The Only Good Zombie Is A Gloriously Demolished One!
Ever since Romero used a helicopter blade to chop the top off of a decomposing aggressor, directors have made it their goal to discover new blackly tongue-in-cheek methods of destroying their monsters as splatteringly bizarre as possible. Zombieland, despite lacking the usual volcanoes of viscera, more than compensates with an escalating series of over-the-top-and-down-the-other-side zombie slaughters. The poor, lurching saps are pulverized with pianos, funhouse hammers, car-doors, pruning shears, and even with a banjo which has just finished playing Deliverance’s “Duelling Banjos” tune.

Rule #5: Zombies Like Famous People! ...to Eat!
A masterful cameo performance can be the difference between a good film and a great one. While the side-splitting Shaun of the Dead played it subtle with blink-and-you’ll-miss-‘em turns by Cate Blanchett and Peter Jackson, Zombieland goes the Planet Terror Quentin Tarantino route, with a destined-for-classic-status extended guest spot (which shall remain unspoiled here) that is so unforgettably wry – and strangely plausible - that it provides the film with a blazing jolt of comic oomph.

Rule #6: Zombies Always Live To Munch Another Day
Even though this movie ends optimistically, eschewing a conventional bleak conclusion, it still leaves us hanging on the perfect note; satisfied and beaming, yet curious to know where our heroes will journey next. Despite being overrun with rotten, ravaging man-eaters, you can’t help but want to revisit Zombieland. Dead or alive.

3.5 out of 5
 
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THis is my new favorite movie EVER! Holy **** it was fantastic. 10/10. I couldn't find a flaw. It was that good.
 
I loved it...i agree with the above that Eisenberg is a bit better/easier to watch than Cera, but they both have their pros and cons

loved the way the music was used...my favorite is when Woody was target shooting in the hallway with the little girl and Hank Williams Sr is playing in the background
 
I was just reading this film has been sucessful enough to warrant a sequel if they decide to go that route.
 
This movie kicked so much ass, SO MUCH ASS. I very much enjoyed it, like more than i thought I would.
 
I was just reading this film has been sucessful enough to warrant a sequel if they decide to go that route.

Since the film opened at $1 million more then the film's budget, it's safe to say that their will be a sequel. Jesse Eisenberg and Woody Harrelson have suggested that the sequel should have a bit of an international flavor to it.
 
Zombieland Nearing Sequel Territory?

"We had a great weekend and it feels good to be the number one movie in America," said Zombieland co-writer Paul Wernick when ShockTillYouDrop.com talked with him and his writing partner Rhett Reese yesterday.

The pair is, in their words, giddy at the zom-com's weekend success which has paved the way for a lucrative week as well. Reese told us, "The movie did 2.1 million on Monday and 2.2 million on Tuesday which is really tremendous and rare for a movie to go up from a Monday to a Tuesday. We're hoping that implies word of mouth, that's a good sign."

"The push for the sequel," Wernick continues, "well, the studio just has to get into it with everyone about budgets and next steps. It all depends on box office. We'll be watching it closely this weekend to see how it progresses."

Zombieland opened in the United Kingdom and Russia yesterday. How the film does there is another determining factors as to whether we'll see the further adventures of Tallahassee and Columbus. "Traditionally, those are markets that mirror the U.S. market pretty well," said Reese. "Both of those markets have a lot of love for zombies. These are the thingsthat are being looked at to see if a sequel makes sense. Foreign box office and continuing domestic box office. We'll get closer to a decision as these things are looked at."
http://www.shocktilyoudrop.com/news/topnews.php?id=12211
 
the writes were on AOTS last week and they are definitely wanting to do a sequel, Im sure there will be one
 
If they get everyone back I think they will. and make the film a bit longer like by 10 minutes.
 

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