Shaun Of The Dead

Started by MacGuffin, March 25, 2004, 02:51:38 PM

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Mesh

Quote from: RaikusSpeaking of music-related jokes, anyone catch "Zombie Nation" playing on the bus when Shaun is going home from work? That was my favorite.

Also, the first music you hear is "Ghost Town" by The Specials.

They shoulda got L7's "Pretend We're Dead" for that "Fake-Out-the-Zombies" part.

A Matter Of Chance

I am going to see this tonight.


I am excited.

MacGuffin

A date with the undead
"Shaun's" makers think its blend of horror and humor makes it a treat for couples. Source: Los Angeles Times



A zombie date movie? That's just one way of looking at "Shaun of the Dead," which has been described as a romantic zombie comedy.

To build awareness and good word of mouth about their odd blend of horror and humor, Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright, the British star and director, respectively, spent a good part of their summer introducing and screening the film for preview audiences around the U.S.
 
A recent hit in the U.K., where it out-grossed "28 Days Later" and the 2004 remake of "Dawn of the Dead," "Shaun" is that rare hybrid of horror and humor that actually works. Pegg and Wright, who co-wrote the screenplay, have found that the mix translates just fine to this side of the Atlantic, and they think it's a great date movie. It's not that farfetched, when you consider the high proportion of young females in audiences for "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and "The Ring."

"There are some bits which go down better here than in the U.K., which is interesting," says Wright.

One difference in audience reactions is that "Americans seem much more inclined to express themselves vocally than English people do," adds Pegg, who plays the film's title character.

Shaun is the film's everyman hero who, at age 29, finds his life in a rut. He lives in squalor with his unemployed pal Ed (Nick Frost), his job as a salesclerk in an electronics shop is a dead end, and his longtime girlfriend Liz (Kate Ashfield) has grown tired of spending every evening at the local pub watching Ed knock back pints and make rude remarks.

The Friday night that Liz issues Shaun an ultimatum to change turns out to be the beginning of a not-so-ordinary weekend. Not that Shaun notices right away, but strange things are occurring in the streets. People are collapsing from unexplained illnesses, throwing the city into chaos, the dead are rising from their graves and by Sunday morning, Shaun's north London neighborhood is under a full-fledged zombie invasion.

Pegg, 34, and Wright, 30, had previously worked on the Channel 4 sitcom "Spaced" (airing on the cable network Trio). A short dream sequence in one episode features Pegg's character, Tim, trapped in the video game "Resident Evil 2" and fending off zombies.

"It was so much fun to shoot and a sort of boyhood ambition fulfilled," says Wright, "and we're both big fans of the zombie genre. We looked at each other and said, 'Maybe there's something more in this.' "

"It wasn't a trial run for the film, but it certainly sparked [our] enthusiasm for the project," says Pegg. They began writing the screenplay in 2001.

Balancing the comedy and the horror wasn't difficult for the two.

"When we finished the script the first time," says Pegg, "we started to identify where it needed a bit more blood, where it needed a few more scares, where it needed a few more laughs. Even after the shoot, when Edgar was in the edit, he was able to see the film as a finished thing and identify anything we missed where there might be too many jokes at a crucially dramatic moment. It wasn't difficult, but it took a lot of care."

"Growing up as part of the 'Star Wars' generation," explains Wright, "it's interesting how easy a jump it was to wanting to see 'Alien,' 'The Thing' and 'An American Werewolf in London.' I think we both became big horror fans through that. Seeing 'Dawn of the Dead' as a 16-year-old was a religious experience."

Though both are originally from the West Country, Pegg and Wright met when Edgar moved to London in 1997 after making independent films and became involved in directing comedy on television. Pegg, who came out of stand-up comedy, and Frost go back even further.

"Simon and Nick knew each other for 10 years and shared an apartment for seven years," says Wright, "so a lot of that chemistry is real."

"You have to go through an acclimatization period when you work with new people," says Pegg, "whereas we can walk into something and know exactly what the others are thinking and save a bit of time, which we desperately need because we always write things which are far more ambitious than the resources we've got." Those ambitions include wanting to tell a story that went beyond the typical horror genre and have broader appeal.

"If the film had just been about Shaun and Ed," says Wright, "we'd have had a following with the college/slackers/stoners crowd, but it goes further than that. It has Shaun's relationship with his mum and with Liz, so we tried to create a rounded world and strike more than one chord.

"We're pleased that it gets a good response from horror fans; at the same time, we didn't want to make it specifically for a horror audience. It's a romantic comedy that has a lethal injection of zombies."

"We wanted it to work on a level whereby it's an emotionally valid film," says Pegg. One in which "you believe in the characters and you feel sorry for them when they go through pain."

"It's the zombie film that you can take your girlfriend to," laughs Wright. "We thought it would be funny if somebody went to see 'Shaun of the Dead' on their first date so they could say, 'I met my future husband and I saw a man disemboweled for the first time.' "
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks

A Matter Of Chance

Just saw this, loved it. I was laughing my head off.

grand theft sparrow

This is probably my favorite movie of the year.  Saw it last night.  Loved it.  My girlfriend loved it which excuses the fact that she admitted to me yesterday that she "kinda [has] no desire to ever see Jaws."

And where can I sign a petition to get Spaced released on DVD in the US?  I've been watching it all week on Trio and it's the sitcom I've been waiting for all my life!

Thrindle

Not gonna lie, first fifteen minutes I was annoyed.  I was like, "Last night GT is here and I'm watching this shite".  But then that 15 minutes was over and I was laughing the loudest in the theatre.  Brilliant movie.  


SPOILER





I loved how the ending made the zombie attack so anti-climactic.  The news reports and such.  It was so true, that is exactly how the world seems to deal with disasters.  Hilarious.
Classic.

Sleuth

What a cute movie

I can't stop thinking about it :oops:
I like to hug dogs

Alethia

Quote from: ThrindleNot gonna lie, first fifteen minutes I was annoyed.  I was like, "Last night GT is here and I'm watching this shite".

so do you call him GT in person then?

london

QuoteI loved how the ending made the zombie attack so anti-climactic. The news reports and such. It was so true, that is exactly how the world seems to deal with disasters. Hilarious.

So true.  Next thing you know, zombies will be on Opra getting makeovers and talking to Dr.Phil about how to deal with people talking down to them.
Ten should be enough.  You think 10 should be enough?  You think we need one more?  You think we need one more.  Alright,  we'll get one more.

Thrindle

Quote from: london
QuoteI loved how the ending made the zombie attack so anti-climactic. The news reports and such. It was so true, that is exactly how the world seems to deal with disasters. Hilarious.

So true.  Next thing you know, zombies will be on Opra getting makeovers and talking to Dr.Phil about how to deal with people talking down to them.
I appreciate the feedback, but you just quoted my spoiler.  :P

As for calling GT, GT... He's more private than I am... I just respect his privacy I guess by not saying his name.
Classic.

Alethia


Pozer

Funny shite of a movie.

Yeeeah booouuy!

modage

saw Shaun for the second time on sunday.  i still LOVE THIS MOVIE.  (although the sound mix in my theatre this time was terrible and detracted from the scares/excitement by having the balance all wrong).  but it could not stop the movie from ruling.  i hope it continues to build word of mouth and make some money cause it didnt do too well.  not that it matters too much, it was already a huge hit overseas and if american audiences are too slow to catch on i suppose it doesnt matter much.  its status as a great cult film at the very least is guaranteed.  i hope more people on here get a chance to see it.  let me just say this loudly...

THE PREVIEWS DO NOT PROPERLY REPRESENT THE FILM.  IT LOOKS GOOFY LIKE SOME SORT OF "SCARY MOVIE" PARODY.  ITS NOT, ITS MUCH MORE CLEVER THAN THAT.  DO NOT BE DETERRED.

also, i've been Tivo'ing SPACED and going through the episodes.  i think i just got to the start of series/season 2.  (daisy just got back from asia with blonde hair).  its very funny and totally geeky with the sheer number of references and parodies they toss into every episode.  also very weird, but i like the cast and am up for ANYTHING different, which this certainly is.
Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.

Sleuth

Is Spaced seriously better than Shaun?
I like to hug dogs

modage

that was what i had heard from EVERYWHERE before i started watching, but SO FAR, IN MY OPINION< no.  there are seedlings of lots of shaun buried all over spaced though.  perhaps my mind will be changed by season/series 2, so i'll let you know....
Christopher Nolan's directive was clear to everyone in the cast and crew: Use CGI only as a last resort.