VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
2795
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA group of young shoppers and employees must band together when a zombie outbreak over runs their Hong Kong shopping center in the middle of the shopping day.A group of young shoppers and employees must band together when a zombie outbreak over runs their Hong Kong shopping center in the middle of the shopping day.A group of young shoppers and employees must band together when a zombie outbreak over runs their Hong Kong shopping center in the middle of the shopping day.
Jordan Chan
- Woody Invincible
- (as Siu Chun Chan)
Emotion Cheung
- Loi
- (as Kam Ching Cheung)
Yiu-Cheung Lai
- Kui
- (as Yiu Cheung Lai)
Angela Ying-Ying Tong
- Rolls
- (as Angela Tong)
Tat-Wah Lok
- Military Officer
- (as Tat Wah Lok)
Soi Cheang
- Automobile Repairman
- (as Pou-Soi Cheang)
Francis Cherry
- Man A
- (English version)
- (voce)
Siu-Lung Ching
- Chan Kam-Shing
- (as Ching Siu-Lung)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- Curiosità sui creditiThe opening credits include Sam Lee and Jordan Chan inside a theater, complaining about the movie they're bootlegging... Bio Zombie!
- Versioni alternativeAn alternate ending is included on the Mei Ah DVD
- ConnessioniEdited into Cent une tueries de zombies (2012)
Recensione in evidenza
Today, on a whim, I decided to pick up the Media Blasters DVD of the Hong Kong living dead flick "BioZombie". I'd heard only a little about it before, and popped it in expecting a trashily enjoyable rip-off of Dawn of the Dead. Well, I was wrong, and right, in equal doses. And having finished the film only minutes ago, I am still unable to wipe the smile off of my face.
Woody and Bee (Jordan Chan and Sam Lee) are two slacker employees of a mostly bootleg VCD shop (changed to DVD for less familiar American audiences) at a shopping mall, who spend their days playing videogames, harassing customers, ditching work, and finding clever (and riotous) ways to make extra cash. Running an errand for their absent boss, they accidentally run over a man carrying a suitcase containing "soda". They give the drink to the injured but still breahing man, not realizing its actually a biological weapon, and then stuff him in their trunk. Shortly after they've gone back to the mall, the man has strangely disappeared...and you can guess what will ensue.
As seems to be the case with so many of the films I've reviewed on IMDB, the plot of this one is razor thin and merely a set-up. It's the clever execution that takes this film to the comedy/horror stratosphere...not to mention, surprisingly, the acting. Chan and Lee are fantastic in their roles, and if this movie gets seen by enough genre fans they could easily give Bruce Campbell a run for his money as the top shelf of smartass horror movie heroes. The first thirty minutes or so of the movie have little to do with zombies, and merely offer a chance for the camera to follow this duo around during their everyday exploits, giving the film the feel of an Asian "Mallrats". In fact, one could almost mistake the first act of the film for a Kevin Smith comedy. The two terrific actors play off of each other like a smarter vision Jay and Silent Bob, making up for what they lack in lovable doofus-ness with almost incomparable cynicism. Trey Parker and Matt Stone would be very, very proud.
Although the "zombies in a shopping mall" motif is clearly meant to be an homage to George Romero's all-time fright classic "Dawn of the Dead", by no means is this what I would consider "a horror film". It's actually just a very, very dark comedy, much in the same vein as such wonderful fan favorites as "Return of the Living Dead", "Re-Animator", and "Dead Alive". However, it's a bit less slapsticky than any of those films, and a bit darker in its humor, too. It's also complete with references to a good number of horror classics. One sequence, for example, is lifted almost shot-for-shot right ouf of Dario Argento's "OPERA" (but believe me, Argento fans won't mind!), and Woody and Bee's hitting the "man with the soda" is followed by a hillarious nod to the then-recent "I Know What You Did Last Summer". The film also manages to do a great job of paying homage to Romero's "Dead" films. One couple in the movie clearly a wonderfully caricatured update of "Night of the Living Dead"'s Harry and Helen Cooper, and another character plays like the direct descendant of "Bub" from "Day of the Dead".
Gorehounds might be a bit disappointed, as the violence is only slightly more graphic than the average American horror film, and zombie fans will perhaps be a little bit let down that the film is significantly less frightening than the newly released Resident Evil. However, I doubt very much that this will dampen their enjoyment very much. BioZombie is a real treat for horror fans, a chance to sit back and laugh WITH a zombie movie, not at it.
The DVD from Media Blasters is a pretty good package. It presents the movie in widescreen (1.85:1) and it looks pretty good despite being non-anamorphic. The sound is a suitable Dolby Digital stereo in either original Cantonese or dubbed English (yes, there ARE optional English subtitles) but the extras are unfortunately limited to some lobbycards and a few trailers...none of which are for this film. However, I'd recommend that horror fans plant the $24.95 for this purchase. It's a fabulously entertaining film, and if it makes its way among genre fans, this could be a Friday night party movie for years to come.
My Grade: A
Woody and Bee (Jordan Chan and Sam Lee) are two slacker employees of a mostly bootleg VCD shop (changed to DVD for less familiar American audiences) at a shopping mall, who spend their days playing videogames, harassing customers, ditching work, and finding clever (and riotous) ways to make extra cash. Running an errand for their absent boss, they accidentally run over a man carrying a suitcase containing "soda". They give the drink to the injured but still breahing man, not realizing its actually a biological weapon, and then stuff him in their trunk. Shortly after they've gone back to the mall, the man has strangely disappeared...and you can guess what will ensue.
As seems to be the case with so many of the films I've reviewed on IMDB, the plot of this one is razor thin and merely a set-up. It's the clever execution that takes this film to the comedy/horror stratosphere...not to mention, surprisingly, the acting. Chan and Lee are fantastic in their roles, and if this movie gets seen by enough genre fans they could easily give Bruce Campbell a run for his money as the top shelf of smartass horror movie heroes. The first thirty minutes or so of the movie have little to do with zombies, and merely offer a chance for the camera to follow this duo around during their everyday exploits, giving the film the feel of an Asian "Mallrats". In fact, one could almost mistake the first act of the film for a Kevin Smith comedy. The two terrific actors play off of each other like a smarter vision Jay and Silent Bob, making up for what they lack in lovable doofus-ness with almost incomparable cynicism. Trey Parker and Matt Stone would be very, very proud.
Although the "zombies in a shopping mall" motif is clearly meant to be an homage to George Romero's all-time fright classic "Dawn of the Dead", by no means is this what I would consider "a horror film". It's actually just a very, very dark comedy, much in the same vein as such wonderful fan favorites as "Return of the Living Dead", "Re-Animator", and "Dead Alive". However, it's a bit less slapsticky than any of those films, and a bit darker in its humor, too. It's also complete with references to a good number of horror classics. One sequence, for example, is lifted almost shot-for-shot right ouf of Dario Argento's "OPERA" (but believe me, Argento fans won't mind!), and Woody and Bee's hitting the "man with the soda" is followed by a hillarious nod to the then-recent "I Know What You Did Last Summer". The film also manages to do a great job of paying homage to Romero's "Dead" films. One couple in the movie clearly a wonderfully caricatured update of "Night of the Living Dead"'s Harry and Helen Cooper, and another character plays like the direct descendant of "Bub" from "Day of the Dead".
Gorehounds might be a bit disappointed, as the violence is only slightly more graphic than the average American horror film, and zombie fans will perhaps be a little bit let down that the film is significantly less frightening than the newly released Resident Evil. However, I doubt very much that this will dampen their enjoyment very much. BioZombie is a real treat for horror fans, a chance to sit back and laugh WITH a zombie movie, not at it.
The DVD from Media Blasters is a pretty good package. It presents the movie in widescreen (1.85:1) and it looks pretty good despite being non-anamorphic. The sound is a suitable Dolby Digital stereo in either original Cantonese or dubbed English (yes, there ARE optional English subtitles) but the extras are unfortunately limited to some lobbycards and a few trailers...none of which are for this film. However, I'd recommend that horror fans plant the $24.95 for this purchase. It's a fabulously entertaining film, and if it makes its way among genre fans, this could be a Friday night party movie for years to come.
My Grade: A
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By what name was Bio Zombie (1998) officially released in India in English?
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