Braindead (1992 film)
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Braindead | |
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Braindead Cover |
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Directed by | Peter Jackson |
Produced by | Jim Booth Jamie Selkirk |
Written by | Stephen Sinclair |
Starring | Timothy Balme Diana Peñalver Elizabeth Moody Ian Watkin |
Distributed by | Trimark Pictures |
Release date(s) | February 12, 1993 |
Running time | Theatrical: 104 min. U.S. Unrated: 97 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $3,000,000 |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
Braindead (New Zealand 1992), released as Dead Alive in North America, is an extreme zombie horror-comedy directed by Peter Jackson. It is in the same vein as Jackson's earlier works Bad Taste and Meet the Feebles but Braindead is rather more polished, with a budget of around $3 million. Although it starts with the capture of a zombie-creating creature on the eerie Skull Island, the opening half of the film is relatively low-key. It isn't until the film's second half when it spirals out of control into a blood filled zombie film.
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[edit] Plot
The first scene of the movie sets up the danger of the Sumatran Rat-Monkey, a hybrid resulting from the rape of tree monkeys by plague rats: An explorer returning from the depths of the island with a rat-monkey in a cage is stopped by his native guides. Seeing the mark of the monkey's bite on his right hand, they immediately hold down the infected explorer and amputate the appendage. A bite mark is then seen on his left arm, which swiftly results in the removal of that limb. Finally, they see a set of bloody scratches on the man's forehead and kill him. The title screen follows the man's dying scream, and as the opening credits roll the captured rat-monkey is shipped to Wellington Zoo in New Zealand.
In 1950s Wellington, Lionel Cosgrove (Timothy Balme) lives with his domineering mother (Elizabeth Moody) and is at her beck and call. To his mother's dismay, Lionel falls for a local shopkeeper, Paquita (Diana Peñalver), and while following the two on a visit to the zoo, his mother is bitten by the Sumatran Rat-Monkey. Despite it being stomped to death, the animal's bite slowly turns her into a zombie. Lionel is horrified, but, ever the momma's boy, is determined to care for her.
He acts as her "nurse", even as she starts murdering other townspeople and, in turn, creating more zombies. Through it all, Lionel tries to keep his zombie mother placated with doses of veterinary anaesthetic and also tries to maintain his relationship with the completely oblivious Paquita.
His mother escapes, however, and is run over by a tram. As the town assumes she is dead, Lionel tranquilises the still-kicking zombie for her funeral. After she is buried, he recovers his mother from the grave, but not before several more people are zombified, including a priest (Stuart Devenie) who attempts to fight his attackers off using kung fu (and in the process utters the immortal cult film line "I kick arse for the Lord!").
As the number of zombies grow, Lionel tries to keep them under wraps in his home. A nurse zombie (Brenda Kendall) gives birth to a dreadful zombie baby, dubbed Selwyn, whom Lionel takes to the park on a surreal and violent occasion. Eventually, Lionel's uncle Les (Ian Watkin) discovers the "corpses" and blackmails his nephew into giving up his mother's estate.
Lionel acquires some poison and dispatches and buries the zombies as Uncle Les and a crowd of his friends invade his home for a housewarming party. But the "poison" turns out to be an animal stimulant and the zombies burst from the ground to attack and infect the party guests in a gory finale.
The movie's climax has Lionel fighting hundreds of zombies, animated intestines, severed heads, and disembodied legs. Most memorable amongst gore fans is Lionel's charge into a room full of zombies with a lawn mower strapped to his chest. He then faces down his now-gargantuan mother, who traps him inside her abdomen as they duel on the house's rooftop. In an over-the-top Freudian "rebirth", he cuts his way out of her grotesquely changed form and she falls into the fiery home below. As Selwyn screams from the burning house, firefighters arrive with ladders and Lionel and Paquita walk away arm-in-arm and covered in gore.
[edit] Versions
This splatter film was released in a number of different versions. In some nations, such as Australia and Britain, the 104 minute film was shown in full. In countries where the censors balked at the extreme gore, the film was initially banned or left unrated before being heavily cut. In Germany a 94 minute version was seen with major cuts to some of the film's grislier scenes, but was widely ignored.
In the United States, where the film was released as Dead Alive, because of another film with rights to the title Braindead, the R-Rated version is only 85 minutes, while the unrated cut is 97 minutes. This, according to director Peter Jackson, is his preferred cut of the film.
[edit] Trivia
- In Peter Jackson's remake of King Kong, a crate can be seen in the cargo hold of the ship that reads "Sumatran Rat-Monkey - Beware the bite!", a reference to the zombie-creating creature from this film.
- It has been said that a total of 300 litres of fake blood were used in the final scene on the rooftop, making it the unofficial goriest scene in film history.
- In some cinemas, tickets for the "Braindead" movie included paperbags for vomiting.
- The song played on the organ as the mourners wait to enter the church (prior to the embalming scene) is "Sodomy" from Peter Jackson's previous film Meet the Feebles(1989).
- During the lawnmower scene, fake blood was pumped at five gallons per second.
- At one point during the lawnmower scene, the jets squirting fake blood are easily visible. Also, many have noted that the blood in this scene is an unusual, bright pink color.
- There is not one moment of action or dialogue cut from Peter Jackson's original screenplay.
- Jackson makes a cameo as the undertaker's assistant in the botched embalming scene.
- The natives of Skull Island, home of film's Sumatran Rat-Monkey, were played by the Fijian national rugby union team.
- On its initial release in its native New Zealand, this movie earned more per screen than Batman Returns (1992).
- The movie was finished under budget with $45,000 remaining. Peter Jackson used it to spend two days shooting the park scene with Lionel and the baby Selwyn. Peter Jackson has gone on to say that it is his favorite scene.
- The film's estimated North American box office gross was $70,544.
- The location used for the film's opening scene, where the explorer is retreiving the rat-monkey, was used again by Jackson in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, when Aragorn and his companions journey to the Paths of the Dead.
- In a lawsuit, Bradley v Wingnut Films Ltd [1993] 1 NZLR 415, it was alleged that the comedy horror film Brain Dead had infringed the privacy of the plaintiffs by containing pictures of the plaintiff's family tombstone. The tombstone appeared on the film for less than 14 seconds. It never appeared in its entirety, only the letters "BRA" were visible behind a person sitting on the wall at the side of the plot. After reviewing the New Zealand judicial authorities on privacy, Gallen J stated: the present situation in New Zealand ... is that there are three strong statements in the High Court in favour of the existence of such a tort in this country and an acceptance by the Court of Appeal that the concept is at least arguable. This case became one of the series of cases which contributed to the introduction of Tort of Invasions of Privacy in New Zealand.
[edit] Quotes
- Lionel Cosgrove: That's my mother you're pissing on.
- Lionel Cosgrove: They're not dead exactly, they're just... sort of rotting.
- Lionel Cosgrove: Party's over!
- Lionel Cosgrove: *As an excuse for punching a zombie baby (Selywn) and stuffing it into a bag* Hyperactive...
- Paquita Maria Sanchez: Your mother ate my dog!
- Lionel Cosgrove: Not all of it.
- Uncle Les: That's someone doing the business!
- Uncle Les: Ahhh, so you found your father's old stag movies, did ya?
- Uncle Les: Is that the one with the donkey and the chambermaid?
- Mr. Matheson: What we need is another war!
- Father McGruder: The Devil's among us!
- Father McGruder: Stand back boy! This calls for some divine intervention!
- Father McGruder: I kick arse for the Lord!
- Intellectual at party (struggling against an attack by Void) Okay! Okay! I take it back! Nabokov wasn't a pedophile!
- Intellectual: (defending himself against oncoming zombies) Some of my best friends are Pedophiles!
- Undertaker: [as Vera's eyes pop out and green slime sprays out] Cranium blowout!
- Zoo Keeper: Story goes, these great big rats come scuttling off the slave ships and raped all the little tree monkeys.
- Zombie Mother: "Nobody loves you like your mother!
[edit] External links
- Braindead at the Internet Movie Database
- Dead Alive movie review with animated screenshots I-Mockery
- Review StillTwitching.com