Während einer mysteriösen Epidemie in einem kleinen Dorf in Cornwall bittet der örtliche Arzt Professor James Forbes um Hilfe. Wenn schreckliche Dinge passieren und Tote laufen, vermutet For... Alles lesenWährend einer mysteriösen Epidemie in einem kleinen Dorf in Cornwall bittet der örtliche Arzt Professor James Forbes um Hilfe. Wenn schreckliche Dinge passieren und Tote laufen, vermutet Forbes, dass es sich um schwarze Magie handelt.Während einer mysteriösen Epidemie in einem kleinen Dorf in Cornwall bittet der örtliche Arzt Professor James Forbes um Hilfe. Wenn schreckliche Dinge passieren und Tote laufen, vermutet Forbes, dass es sich um schwarze Magie handelt.
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Hammer Horror tackles the zombie sub-genre with no little amount of success. Directed by John Gilling, The Plague Of The Zombies was filmed back to back with the equally entertaining The Reptile. Filmed out of fortress Hammer that was Bray Studios, the same sets that were used for The Reptile were also used here. With Bernard Robinson's Cornish Village again a treat for sore eyes. 1966 was the last year that Hammer used Bray Studios and it's fitting that it was a year that saw efficient and varying creepers filling out the Hammer Horror cannon. Peter Bryan's story, aided by some interesting imagery, delves into the dark world of witchcraft and voodoo, thus giving this particular "zombie" piece an extra dimension. This is not merely about zombies roaming the countryside and killing indiscriminately. Evil they are of course, but they have a purpose and being that comes to light as the story unfolds. There's also nods to tyranny and exploitation, wryly observed by the makers here, cheekily cloaked in a cloud of rotting flesh.
Technically it holds up rather well too. The effects are strong enough to carry the story, with the zombies eerie personified as they shuffle around all green flesh and grumbling away as we know they should. All captured in deluxe colour that comes out nice in High Definition. The cast are fine, with Morell standing out as he gives his usual classy and professional performance, while James Bernard's score is suitably at one with each and every change of pace. This is not just a fine and under appreciated part of the Hammer Horror output, it's also a worthy and most notable entry in the "zombie" genre. See it if you can. 7/10
This is probably Hammer's most shamelessly entertaining film. This doesn't have the cutting edge politics and satire of Romero's original zombie trilogy, or the over-the-top cheap gore of Raimi's Evil Dead films, but has the distinction of being a typically British film, only with zombies! It's predictable and silly but it's bloody good fun. It's also made with Hammer's high production standards, beautiful sets and a surprisingly sinister edge. These aren't zombies that will eat your brains, and to be honest they only properly turn up in the last twenty minutes or so, but the film moves fast and has a great lead performance in stiff-upper-lipped Andre Morell. Not bad for a film that was the supporting feature in a Hammer double bill.
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- WissenswertesFilmed simultaneously with "Das schwarze Reptil (1966)," in August and September of 1965, using many of the same sets, most noticeably the main village set on the back lot at Bray Studios.
- PatzerWhen Sir James and Peter are watching Alice's grave, they have to leave to help the vicar who has been attacked. The squire and his men open the grave and reveal Alice's corpse but are disturbed when Sir James and Peter return. As the two watch she transforms into a zombie and crawls out of her grave. But when they arrived back in the cemetery and found the open grave we see Alice for an instant in her coffin and she is already in zombie make up, even though this is before the transformation.
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Sir James Forbes: Someone in this village is practicing witchcraft. That corpse wandering on the moors is an undead, a zombie.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Das schwarze Reptil (1966)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
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- Auch bekannt als
- La maldición de los zombies
- Drehorte
- Heatherden Hall, Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Exterior of Sir James Forbes' residence)
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 30 Minuten
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- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1