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Warm Bodies
A terrible plague has left the planet's population divided between zombies and humans. An unusual zombie named R (Nicholas Hoult) sees his walking-dead brethren attacking a living woman named Julie (Teresa Palmer) and rescues her. Julie sees that R is different from the other zombies, and the pair embark on an unusual relationship. As their bond grows and R becomes more and more human, a chain of events unfolds that could transform the entire lifeless world.
| Genre: | Horror, Romantic comedy |
|---|---|
| Length: | 98 min. |
| Rating: | PG-13 |
| Cast: | Nicholas Hoult, Teresa Palmer, John Malkovich, Rob Corddry, Dave Franco, Analeigh Tipton, Cory Hardrict, Daniel Rindress-Kay, Vincent Leclerc, Clifford LeDuc-Vaillancourt, Billie Calmeau, Adam Driscoll, Chris Cavener, Jonathan Dubsky, Alec Bourgeois |
|---|---|
| Directed by: | Jonathan Levine |
| Produced by: | Bruna Papandrea, David Hoberman, Todd Lieberman |
| Official Site: | http://warmbodiesmovie.com/ |
FILM REVIEW: WARM BODIES
By Michael Phillips
Tribune Newspapers Critic
2 1/2 stars
The tween-minded zombie romance "Warm Bodies" pulls a comic-romantic twist on a genre better known for its entrails. It is narrated by the undead fellow known as R, played by Nicholas Hoult, soon to be slaying giants in "Jack the Giant Slayer."
The voice-over narration confirms our hero's sensitive side. "I just want to connect," he tells us, accompanying footage of R stumbling around an abandoned airport on an ordinary undead day, among his fellow zombies in a post-apocalyptic landscape. R covets his long-playing records (actual vinyl!), and like the title character in "Wall-E," he's a collector and a nostalgist by nature. All he needs is love.
The film, written and directed by Jonathan Levine, comes from Isaac Marion's novel, and its rules of zombie life and lifelessness are pretty clear. By eating human brains, zombies can experience that victim's memories. More pertinent to the narrative, which riffs on "Romeo and Juliet" to the point of including a balcony scene, in "Warm Bodies" the zombie state is not permanent. It's reversible. If you're in love with a young woman (Teresa Palmer) who is not yet dead, this is promising news.
Palmer's character, Julie, is the overprotected daughter of General Grigio, leader of the movement to keep the zombies at bay on the other side of the quarantine wall. (What's up with that character name? Is he a crew chief at Trader Joe's?) Julie and R have their own little "meet-cute" according to rom-com requirements: While hunting for zombies with her boyfriend and some other pretty people, Julie is saved from being eaten by R. The pale young man's heartstrings go zing! when he spies her lovely loveliness. Her dawning interest in decaying nerds with poetry in their souls sparks a revolution.
We're a long way from the manic, repulsive, jolly slapstick of "Zombieland." This is more like a sensitively bent version of a Nicholas Sparks novel, where lovers must overcome significant social obstacles before moving on to the bed. At one point we hear R remind himself: "Don't be creepy ... don't be creepy," as he tries to pass for human among actual humans. Hoult has a nice, sympathetic quality at such moments, though the whole of "Warm Bodies," in both its comic and dramatic strains, lacks a certain ... what? Ooomph? Intensity? Invention?
Levine has a strong instinct as a packager of moments, ladling on the alt-rock just so before ladling on another ladle's worth. So far he's proven himself wildly uneven, careening from the smugness of "The Wackness" to the heartening success of "50/50." "Warm Bodies" lands somewhere between the two. Rob Corddry, as one of R's undead pals, quietly steals the show in his first wholly effective screen turn. Usually, Corddry gives audiences too much, playing the boor. Here, he may be zombiefied, but he warms to the underplaying opportunity at hand.
MPAA rating: PG-13 (for zombie violence and some language).
Running time: 1:37.
Cast: Nicholas Hoult (R); Teresa Palmer (Julie); John Malkovich (Grigio).
Credits: Written and directed by Jonathan Levin, based on the novel by Isaac Marion; produced by Bruna Papandrea, David Hoberman and Todd Lieberman. A Summit Entertainment release.
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