L'Enfer des zombies

  • Italie Zombi 2 (plus)
Bande-annonce 3

Résumés(1)

Dans le port de New York, un bateau semblant abandonné dérive et frôle la statue de la liberté. Accosté par deux policiers, celui-ci s'avère contenir une créature terrifiante : un mort-vivant qui agresse les gardes-côtes avant de tomber à l'eau. Intriguée, une jeune journaliste décide d'enquêter et emmène quelques amis sur l'île d'où provient le mystérieux bateau... Mais l'île n'est plus habité que par un médecin et ses quelques patients. Très vite, ils découvriront le secret de cette île maudite où les morts se lèvent de leurs tombes pour dévorer les vivants... (Neo Publishing)

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Vidéo (3)

Bande-annonce 3

Critiques (6)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Le plus cristallin, le plus pur, incroyablement transparent et insouciant Lucio Fulci. Mais dans le bon sens du terme. Zombi 2 est la comédie d'horreur la plus adorable que j'aie jamais vue. Le premier euro-trash dont je suis vraiment tombé amoureux. Un environnement exotique d'îles tropicales, une tonalité sexuelle alléchante, des dialogues stupides, des horreurs de gore piquantes, la "musique midi" bon marché de Fabio Frizzi et plusieurs masques de zombies vraiment ingénieux. Le combat sous-marin entre un zombie et un requin est incroyable ! ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais With this film Fulci has finally won my heart. The zombies look great and the story is passable for 1970s Italy standards. The only thing that bothered me a little was the music and, especially the fact that, when facing an extreme situation, the heroes, instead of running away, stand in front of the zombies exposing as much skin as possible so the monster can comfortably take a bite. Regardless, this film was a very pleasant surprise and one of the best of the Italian school of horror – though it’s true that it can’t be compared with Romero, he made social satire, Fulci made horror. Thanks for that. ()

Annonces

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais It was my first encounter with Lucio Fulci and I can't say I was disappointed. Although he doesn't live up to his nickname 'king of death' until the last half hour, even until then it's still worth a watch. About halfway through there is an extremely charming, and for me personally unintentionally comical, fight scene between a zombie and a two metre shark. Although it’s quite short, it's definitely worth checking out, you won't see anything like it in another film. There are also small hints of morbid "appetizers", but the real carnage starts about 20 minutes before the end. A zombie picnic over a fresh corpse, desserts for zombies in the form of Molotov cocktails, blood spurting merrily in all directions, the zombies are cheerful, playful and want to cuddle, lol. The final shot of the zombies marching towards Manhattan and the absence of the classic happy ending is very satisfying. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A film so clearly bad and shallow that you it’s impossible to be mad at it. If you fancy unbridled zombie appetite, stiff and ketchup-laden Italian gore, and a host of classic genre scenes, complemented by exotic settings and Fulci's boundless imagination for the most absurd (shark vs zombie) and best (detailed eye-piercing from the perspective of the victim) B-movie scenes, it may well be the absolute pinnacle of this area of unserious filmmaking. It's my fault that I don't really look for such bullshit and thus I was unable to appreciate all those delicate details under the weight of strong amateurism, omnipresent illogic and impossible character behaviour; otherwise, I could have had a lot of fun. 50% ()

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Fulci's image composition is, by default, stunning. He has plenty of ideas, and he added some clever and original elements to the classic living-dead extermination (thew incredible underwater action). The fact that there is also more emphasis on female sexuality elsewhere than in the roles of defenseless victims gives the film a much more erotic feel. Combined with the distant glances of the eyes of the fairer sex (note that the main characters' eyes are either green or blue), this creates a rather mysterious and much more provocative feel. On the other hand, I couldn’t help but notice that if the director had been more careful to control his own filmmaking process (finishing a scene as a whole, establishing shots, a bit of plot clearing of otherwise stagnant water) the whole composition of butchered bodies would have stood out much, much more. Although it has to be admitted that maybe that's what this Italian film wave was all about... ()

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