World War Z must have one of the shortest first acts in film history. The
first act, usually the first half hour is generally where the
conflict is introduced. This film opens with Gerry Lee, Brad Pitt, a former UN
investigator having breakfast with his family. Five minutes later, BAM,
zombies. No time is wasted getting straight to the conflict. Begin second act.
The story is not complicated: zombies take over the world and Brad
Pitt is obliged to save the day. The assault of zombie movies over the past few
years has been such an onslaught that by default the genre itself now gives me
an automatic feeling of “I don’t care.” World War Z is very
much another zombie film, but a damn exciting one. Even the script’s description for
becoming a zombie, turning Zeke, is subtlety refreshing.
“It’s not what you say but how you say it.” With cinematic
excellence, Director Marc Forster breaths new live into this tired cliché. It’s
all in the delivery, and WWZ definitely delivers.
As Gerry Lee (Pitt) travels the world trying to solve the mystery behind
the infection causing people to turn “Zeke,” the scenes that unfold during his
expedition are so exciting that story arc is incidental in comparison. A
memorable scene is when a military commander becomes infected. He’s got about
ten seconds: “I’m a goddamn Zeke…I got this one boys.” Then, he puts a bullet in this
own head.
The exotic set designs of the adventurous locales are the
highlights of the film. First an adrenaline pumped escape from an infested
Philadelphian housing project, then to a US navy ship at sea, then over to a US
military base in Korea where a massive fire fight breaks out. Next Lee arrives
in Israel where the citizens have protected themselves against the Zekes in a
totally ingenious, but vulnerable walled up construction. The set design here
is just incredible and when the situation goes awry, and things start blowing
up, the visual effects are some of the best around, bar none.
Errata: Brad Pitt picks up an Israel solider sidekick along the
way. They are both the sole survivors of a horrific plane crash. How
convenient.
In 28 Days Later a single
drop of infected blood causes a subject to turn into a zombie. In WWZ Brad Pitt
gets Zeke blood in his mouth and doesn’t turn. This fact is acknowledged early
in the film so we know this fact for the remainder of it. There doesn’t seem to
be a single, recognized method of contracting zombieism.
Interestingly there is a real drug called Tetrodoxin that is
supposedly the closest thing to an actual zombie-causing agent in existence.
7.5/10