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Boy Eats Girl

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 20min
NOTE IMDb
4,9/10
4,1 k
MA NOTE
David Leon in Boy Eats Girl (2005)
A boy declares his love for his girlfriend, only to die the same night. He is brought back to life by his mother as a flesh-craving zombie, who sires more teen undead while trying to control his, appetite for his beloved.
Lire trailer1:28
1 Video
4 photos
ComédieFantaisieHorreur

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA boy declares his love for his girlfriend, only to die the same night. He is brought back to life by his mother as a flesh-craving zombie, who sires more teen undead while trying to control... Tout lireA boy declares his love for his girlfriend, only to die the same night. He is brought back to life by his mother as a flesh-craving zombie, who sires more teen undead while trying to control his, er, appetite for his beloved.A boy declares his love for his girlfriend, only to die the same night. He is brought back to life by his mother as a flesh-craving zombie, who sires more teen undead while trying to control his, er, appetite for his beloved.

  • Réalisation
    • Stephen Bradley
  • Scénario
    • Derek Landy
  • Casting principal
    • Samantha Mumba
    • David Leon
    • Tadhg Murphy
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,9/10
    4,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Stephen Bradley
    • Scénario
      • Derek Landy
    • Casting principal
      • Samantha Mumba
      • David Leon
      • Tadhg Murphy
    • 38avis d'utilisateurs
    • 51avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 7 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Trailer

    Photos3

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux37

    Modifier
    Samantha Mumba
    Samantha Mumba
    • Jessica
    David Leon
    David Leon
    • Nathan
    Tadhg Murphy
    Tadhg Murphy
    • Diggs
    Laurence Kinlan
    • Henry
    Sara James
    • Cheryl
    Mark Huberman
    Mark Huberman
    • Samson
    Sarah Burke
    • Charlotte
    Paul Reid
    Paul Reid
    • Shane
    Jane Valentine
    • Glenda
    Conor Ryan
    • Kenneth
    Deirdre O'Kane
    Deirdre O'Kane
    • Grace
    Doreen Keogh
    Doreen Keogh
    • Mrs. Brumble
    Bryan Murray
    • Mr. Frears
    Denis Conway
    • Craig
    Lalor Roddy
    Lalor Roddy
    • Fr. Cornelius
    Gary Lydon
    • Garda Sergeant
    Domhnall Gleeson
    Domhnall Gleeson
    • Bernard
    Elaine Murphy
    Elaine Murphy
    • Dympna
    • Réalisation
      • Stephen Bradley
    • Scénario
      • Derek Landy
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs38

    4,94K
    1
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    Avis à la une

    8skorkk

    Harmless fun

    From the title "Boy eats Girl" it's pretty clear that this film is one that requires you to leave your brain outside the door. Do that and you should enjoy it. If you're hoping for anything more than a bit of enjoyable fluff, look elsewhere.

    The film starts off great, the audience gets to know the main characters quite well, and there are more than a few good laughs. It goes downhill slightly from the moment in the film were the infection begins to spread. This is mainly because it all seems so rushed. However the gory bits (which there is quite a lot of for a 15A film) are varied and inventive enough to keep the viewers entertained.

    The main cast all do a good job, in particular David Leon and Tadhg Murphy. Samantha Mumba is good in her role, but she hasn't got as much dialogue as you'd expect from the films lead. Some of the supporting cast however (for example, Bryan Murray as Fr.Frears) are awful.

    Overall it is an entertaining, funny, gory movie, and one of the best Irish productions in a long time.
    5stupid_llama

    When Zombie Rom-Com Forgets the Bite

    Samantha Mumba brings some spark as the love interest in this Irish teen-zombie flick, and the premise should work - awkward teen Nathan accidentally zombifies his school after a botched resurrection, forcing his crush Jessica to navigate gory hallways and undead hormones. There's charm in the suburban Irish setting (imagine Shaun of the Dead but with uniformed teens and more rain). A few gags land, like Nathan's mom obliviously serving "special" meatloaf or a zombified jock still flexing in a mirror.

    But it's a shambles of missed opportunities. The satire on teen angst and conformity feels toothless - no real jab at clique mentality or authority figures, just splatter and slapstick. The gore's restrained to PG-13 levels, draining the fun from what should be chaotic, irreverent carnage. Characters make baffling choices (why is the principal still enforcing detention during an apocalypse?), and the tone wobbles between dark comedy and half-hearted romance without committing. It's neither scary nor sharply funny, just... there.

    The Verdict: Harmless for forgettable. Fails to ignite as satire, horror, or romance. Watch Shaun instead.
    7SteveRaccoon

    Harmless comedy fun

    Boy Eats Girl is the kind of film to watch when you're in a non-committal mood, something that demands only vague attention and which doesn't try to be clever. If you want a horror or a zombie movie then look elsewhere, it's neither nor does it try to be.

    It is a comedy, let's get it straight right now, not a zombie film. Romero's legacy to pop culture and the film industry certainly gets a good outing here, but this isn't a film to make gorehounds feel fat and happy, nor will zombie purists find anything to debate over.

    A lot of the characters are like those from sappy American Teen comedies but with Irish accents and in situations involving blood and throw-away limbs.

    Perhaps this helps: It's California Man with gore.

    It entertained me for the short running time (about an hour I made it) and I liked it enough to cough up £5 for it. If you give it a chance as a silly gory comedy, you may well like it too.
    6MetalGeek

    When Irish Zombies are Smiling...

    "Boy Eats Girl" is an Irish-made romantic zombie comedy ("RomZomCom?") about a high schooler who, when he thinks he's lost the girl of his dreams, commits suicide ... only to end up becoming Patient Zero of a zombie outbreak thanks to his well meaning but misguided mother, who resurrects him from the dead with the help of a voodoo spell book. After reading that description, I'm sure those of you who are looking for a serious zombie movie are already going to look for something else. For those who are still reading, "Boy Eats Girl" was a hilarious horror/comedy treat with -- gasp! -- a sweet side!!

    As the film begins, our high school hero Nathan has already got enough problems -- being bullied by the jocks, abused on the rugby field - but when he accidentally misses a chance to tell his long time friend Jessica how he really feels about her, he goes home and hangs himself. Re-awakening the next morning after a last minute "rescue" by his mother, Nathan begins to notice some, errrr, "changes" in his body, chief among them the urge to munch on human flesh. Turns out Mom used a voodoo spell book "borrowed" from the local church to bring Nathan back from the dead... but there was a page missing from the book so she accidentally left out a step. Whoops. Nathan is able to contain his, errr, "appetite" for only so long, until he finally takes a bite out of one of his high school tormentors at a school dance. This, of course, is a bad idea. His victim goes on to bite some people, who then go on to bite some more people, who go on to bite even MORE people, until sure enough, his quaint little Irish village is being overrun by zombies. Even though he may be one of the Undead now, Nathan still doesn't want anything to happen to his beloved Jessica, so he and his two doofus friends race to her family's home to rescue her just before the horde of undead descends upon the place. Hilariously over-the-top mayhem ensues.

    It takes a little while for the zombie shenanigans to really get going in "Boy Eats Girl" but once it does I doubt any gorehound will be disappointed. (The scene where Jessica charges into the horde on her father's farm machine is friggin' EPIC!) From then on, the blood and guts, as well as the one liners, come fast and furious. The compact run time (just about 80 minutes) keeps "Boy Eats Girl" from overstaying its welcome, and wraps everything up nicely.

    Fans of "Shaun of the Dead" or "Zombieland" should get a few kicks out of "Boy Eats Girl," and the film is a worthy addition to the growing Zombie Comedy genre.
    4movedout

    Not as bad as you'd think, not good either.

    Part satire and part romantic-comedy, Boy Eats Girl should be looked upon as a homage to the classic 70s horror genre and not a poor effort at recreating the success of Shaun of the Dead. Hailing from Ireland, it takes plenty of liberties in its character's settings and mannerisms. Not wholly European as you'd expect but it works on most levels, just not so much on the humour however.

    Nathan (David Leon) is the heartbroken teenager who accidentally kills himself after making the mistake of witnessing the love of his young teenage life, Jessica (Irish pop sensation, Samantha Mumba) in a compromising situation with his school's Lothario. Nathan's mother (Deirdre O'Kane) finds his lifeless body in his room and remembers the handy book of resurrection spells that she'd found just days earlier in the bowels of the church that she works at.

    As easy as you can say beginner's luck, she manages to bring back her son and gets him ready for the next day of school. Nathan starts to feel the effects of his zombification when he starts to feel impervious to pain and feels hungry all the time. His 2 pals, Henry and Diggs (Laurence Kinlan and Tadhg Murphy) who at times seem even less shiftless than their dead friend, get worried when they see Nathan's disenchantment with Jessica vanish.

    At the night's school disco, resident slut and girlfriend of the toughest jock in school, Cheryl (Sara James) propositions Nathan. Not exactly willing to do what Nathan wants from her, she ditches him. Unfortunately for Nathan, the jock boyfriend follows him as he stumbles on to the rugby pitch. Normally, this would be a cakewalk for bully-kind everywhere but Nathan's newfound undead ability of super-strength makes it easy for him to overpower the jock. He finally gives in to temptation and takes a couple of deadly chunks out of him. Nathan runs home and is given the bare bones of his worsening condition by his mother who promptly locks him in the garage as she finds a cure. Things start to get a whole lot worse for him after last night's attack starts a chain reaction of killings, each spawning a much more vicious version of Nathan's condition.

    The plot and situation 'borrows' heavily from a handful of movies, especially the 1993 cult classic, My Boyfriend's Back with virtually the same sub-plot of unrequited love between the unfortunate undead and his high-school sweetheart. As most will use Shaun of the Dead as a touchstone in understanding the film's comedy/gore tandem, it's intended use of black comedy and detached humour falls short.

    The backyard splatter that comes from fending off ravenous classmates and neighbours is refreshing to see and it does it well. The violence and the reactions of the harried survivors are always tongue-in-cheek which is satisfying, as the zombie horde never comes close to being scary, just downright silly. The flaying of skin and removal of limbs is a requisite in any good romp through a town full of undead. However, the gore starts of perfunctory, not exactly a good sign when it takes almost half the movie to get there.

    As the film progresses to its climax, a visible shift in priorities takes place. Suddenly, the story stops and a zombie free-for-all take place, courtesy of a pimped out tractor and surge of adrenaline from the heroine. As the movie is a relatively short enterprise, clocking in at about 77 minutes (including credits), it almost makes up for the lack of spilled blood and guts when the horror aspect of the film finally kicks in.

    Most satires succumb to taking themselves too seriously at some point in their films and Boy Eats Girl is no different. The romance between Nathan and Jessica felt too overdone in the beginning, leading to the most controversial scene in the movie that initially got it banned in its native Ireland. The attempted suicide scene was clumsy and awkward; not exactly an endorsement for depressed teenagers everywhere.

    The film starts out slow, working out the set-up of the eventual suicide that triggers the rest of the plot, leaving just a third of the movie for bona fide zombie mayhem. Each transition is disjointed and rushed, especially the weak example of a deus ex machina during the last minutes of the film.

    The 1-note characters and unresolved story lines are indicative of the apathetic acting and lack of fleshed out character development. Mumba does not show any signs of being a tough female character in the beginning, making a transformation into the movie's heroine seem out of character. Leon's Nathan seems too self-aware and confident to pull off being the angst-ridden chump who finds it hard to bring up his true feelings around Jessica.

    From start to end, its campy throwback to nonsensical horror-comedy masks over its inability to find its feet and its problematic attempts at satire. Suffering from a painfully short running time and an overly brisk pacing, Boy Eats Girl does not fulfill the potential that it has. What it does achieve is a quick and harmless way to spend just over an hour when bored.

    Rating: 2 out of 5 stars

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Domhnall Gleeson's film debut.
    • Gaffes
      At the start of the film, the car is a 1996 VW Golf with a Dublin registration number. When they pull up outside the house to drop Jess off, the car has changed into a 1993 model with Kildare plates. Later, when the car crashes after they run down Craig, it has changed back into the 1996 Dublin car again.
    • Citations

      Diggs: Do you have any special powers or anything?

      Nathan: I'm stronger, I'm faster, and I don't feel pain.

      Diggs: Can you fly?

      Nathan: No, Diggs, I can't fucking fly!

      Diggs: Pity.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Clean Break: Épisode #1.4 (2015)
    • Bandes originales
      Spitting Games
      Performed by Snow Patrol

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Boy Eats Girl?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 septembre 2005 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Irlande
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Tatilde dehşet
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Dublin, County Dublin, Irlande
    • Sociétés de production
      • Element Films
      • Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
      • Isle of Man Film
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 5 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 130 051 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 20min(80 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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