एक दिल टूटा हुआ वन्यजीव फोटोग्राफर अपने काम में खुद को झोंक देता है, केवल खुद को अजीब परिवर्तनों का अनुभव करने के लिए.एक दिल टूटा हुआ वन्यजीव फोटोग्राफर अपने काम में खुद को झोंक देता है, केवल खुद को अजीब परिवर्तनों का अनुभव करने के लिए.एक दिल टूटा हुआ वन्यजीव फोटोग्राफर अपने काम में खुद को झोंक देता है, केवल खुद को अजीब परिवर्तनों का अनुभव करने के लिए.
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I watched it on netflix and i cant believe i watch it till the end...
The Zombie horror film genre is not new to me. In the past I've seen directors like George Romero(The Night, Dawn, and Day Of The Dead), Lucio Fulci(Zombie 1979), Jorge Grau(Let Sleeping Corpses Lie a.k.a The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue), Andrea Bianchi(Burial Ground: The Nights of Terror). Add to this list The Re-animator Trilogy directed by directors Stuart Gordon(1) and Brian Yuzna(2,3), and The Return Of The Living Dead 3 - a.k.a. Mortal Zombie(Brian Yuzna). These films are available on the internet. Search for them and either download them for your personal collection or watch them online for free.
And there you have it. After watching all the above, watch Rise Of The Zombie(2013). You'll see the basic idea was copied from the above mentioned films. Plot: a man travels to remote forest location, where he sets camp and is generally alone. Man is bitten by unknown insect while exploring forest. Gradual transformation turns man into Zombie with an insatiable appetite for fresh meat(preferably human). Lone Zombie infects another human who in turn becomes a Zombie, spawning a mini-army of Zombies. Film ends here, where an teaser for Land Of The Zombie(2014) is placed.
First of all these days its all about making money, even for independent film directors. At the start they have a meager budget and so have mediocre special effects. So they wait for the profits of the first film to kick in and hopefully dream of making either a sequel or franchise.
Verdict: nothing new for the genre so zero points for creativity. The makeup effects and gore in the film is pathetic for a seasoned horror fan like myself who has seen better. The background score is decent to the movie and does not let the film down. The acting is decent and photography and location is adequate to this film. Actor Luke Kenny(who plays the Zombie) has acted before in films like Bombay Boys(1998) and Rock On!! (2008). He is a decent actor but I fear he will never rise above low budget B-movies. Actress Kirti Kulhari has even acted before in Dharini (2002), Khichdi: The Movie (2010), Shaitan (2011) and Jal(2013). She is a good looking, talented actress and I feel that if she gets the big break, could move into mainstream Bollywood films.
They say that this is "INDIA'S FIRST ZOMBIE FILM". Then what about Tahkhana(1986)? This was also a Zombie film in my belief. The Ramsay brothers have been the mainstay of Hindi Horror. But since their departure, no company has focused more on the genre. Ram Gopal Varma Verman did brilliantly in movies like Raat, Bhoot and Phoonk. But since then his directional style has suffered. Vikram Bhatt is another superb horror film director with films like: 1920, Shaapit: The Cursed and Haunted - 3D.
In conclusion: we need more heart and soul in our films. Then we'll surely succeed in reawakening this genre.
More Ramsay Brother's Horror films: Purana Mandir 1984, Veerana 1988, Purani Haveli 1989 and Bandh Darwaza 1990.
And there you have it. After watching all the above, watch Rise Of The Zombie(2013). You'll see the basic idea was copied from the above mentioned films. Plot: a man travels to remote forest location, where he sets camp and is generally alone. Man is bitten by unknown insect while exploring forest. Gradual transformation turns man into Zombie with an insatiable appetite for fresh meat(preferably human). Lone Zombie infects another human who in turn becomes a Zombie, spawning a mini-army of Zombies. Film ends here, where an teaser for Land Of The Zombie(2014) is placed.
First of all these days its all about making money, even for independent film directors. At the start they have a meager budget and so have mediocre special effects. So they wait for the profits of the first film to kick in and hopefully dream of making either a sequel or franchise.
Verdict: nothing new for the genre so zero points for creativity. The makeup effects and gore in the film is pathetic for a seasoned horror fan like myself who has seen better. The background score is decent to the movie and does not let the film down. The acting is decent and photography and location is adequate to this film. Actor Luke Kenny(who plays the Zombie) has acted before in films like Bombay Boys(1998) and Rock On!! (2008). He is a decent actor but I fear he will never rise above low budget B-movies. Actress Kirti Kulhari has even acted before in Dharini (2002), Khichdi: The Movie (2010), Shaitan (2011) and Jal(2013). She is a good looking, talented actress and I feel that if she gets the big break, could move into mainstream Bollywood films.
They say that this is "INDIA'S FIRST ZOMBIE FILM". Then what about Tahkhana(1986)? This was also a Zombie film in my belief. The Ramsay brothers have been the mainstay of Hindi Horror. But since their departure, no company has focused more on the genre. Ram Gopal Varma Verman did brilliantly in movies like Raat, Bhoot and Phoonk. But since then his directional style has suffered. Vikram Bhatt is another superb horror film director with films like: 1920, Shaapit: The Cursed and Haunted - 3D.
In conclusion: we need more heart and soul in our films. Then we'll surely succeed in reawakening this genre.
More Ramsay Brother's Horror films: Purana Mandir 1984, Veerana 1988, Purani Haveli 1989 and Bandh Darwaza 1990.
This is by far the worst movie I ever watched in all genres. The theater was absolutely empty. Cheap production quality shows right from the beginning.The movie is as slow and monotonous. Its a 10 min movie stretched over 2 hrs in the worst way possible. It lacks content and never catches your attention even for a second. Poor direction, poor script, poor screenplay and sub par acting.
For the Gory parts - I am absolutely sure these guys did not watch a single Hollywood movie for inspiration. The good thing is its absolutely original how else could it be this boring.I would rather watch a guy eating KFC chicken for over 2 hrs than watch this movie. Please save yourself and your family. This is video terrorism if such a term exists. Issued in public interest.
For the Gory parts - I am absolutely sure these guys did not watch a single Hollywood movie for inspiration. The good thing is its absolutely original how else could it be this boring.I would rather watch a guy eating KFC chicken for over 2 hrs than watch this movie. Please save yourself and your family. This is video terrorism if such a term exists. Issued in public interest.
Writing, acting, story, flow, every aspect of this movie was terrible. Finishing watching it was painfully hard work. I've seen every zombie movie I can find and this was 100% the worst.
5ivko
This isn't a great film, but it does have an interesting premise. Zombie movies almost invariably focus on what happens after zombies enter the world, not the creation of the plague itself, or if they do show patient zero it's just a quick glance as they transition. This movie follows the last days of Neil Parker, a nature photographer who is bitten by an insect and contracts an illness that turns him into the famous monster.
Neil likes to lose himself in his work, often disappearing without notice for weeks. After his most recent trip he returns to an angry girlfriend who ends their relationship. After one last night out with a friend for his bachelor party, Neil decides to head out into the wilderness to clear his head. The trip starts well enough, but as he's taking pictures of some insects he gets bitten by something, we're never shown exactly what, and gets a nasty wound on his arm.
At first he basically ignores it, but after several days the wound is shown to have gotten bigger and uglier, with inflamed skin and large pustules. Still, he only cleans the wound and bandages it, hoping that it will get better on its own. Around this time he also begins experiencing some delirium from the illness and develops a sudden craving for insects and animals. Eventually, those cravings turn into something darker, until finally he becomes something subhuman.
There are numerous graphic scenes of him succumbing to his new hunger, but what was really disturbing to me are the scenes of his dreams. At first they start as memories of happier times with his girlfriend, but gradually they begin to get disjointed and fragmented as the illness breaks down his human side. Anyone who has ever been severely ill will recognize the symptoms of fever dreams we sometimes get when sick or under severe stress, but the way it's depicted here is as a downward spiral with no end.
Essentially, it's a front row seat to Neil's slow death, with him gradually realizing that he is losing himself. His memories change from a comfort of happier times to a torment that haunts him even as he loses the awareness of who he once was. Frankly, it's disturbing.
So that's the part the movie gets right. Unfortunately, there is a lot it doesn't. The acting is often stiff and amateurish, with the actors almost seeming like they are just regular people that the producers asked if they wanted to be in a movie. And the cinematography is real B-movie grade stuff, with wide shots that serve no purpose except to keep the audience at arms distance instead of pulling us in, or terrible lighting that makes it hard to know exactly what's happening.
But the worst aspect of the movie by far is the directing. The pacing is so bad that it makes the movie almost unwatchable. The only way I could get through it was by skipping ahead several minutes at a time to avoid overly long scenes that took forever to get to anything interesting. Watching a ten minute scene of Neil just sitting in the shadows watching the people of the village have a party was excruciating. Nothing happens, just people walking around and talking, and there are several scenes like that. And they make the odd choice of having his first indiscretions happen off screen, only hinting at the events in brief flashbacks, but bring us along for numerous animal and insect feasts.
They also linger on his loved ones, who eventually begin to realize something is wrong because Neil has been gone so long, but bizarrely these plot lines are started but never finished. So much screen time is devoted to them calling one another and asking if anyone had seen him that finishing the movie without any of them ever finding him or figuring out what happened just makes you wonder why they bothered including them at all.
Better editing might have shaved 30 minutes or so from the film and made it a better watch, but in truth it had so many problems that I'm not sure. There's a kernel of a good idea in the story, but the execution of that idea is completely muddled by dead-end story lines, bad filming, and directionless directing. Which is too bad, because some of the stuff here is pretty emotionally loaded, like the scene of Neil sobbing after losing several days to his fever and picking up his camera to try and bring back some sense of who he used to be and the things he once loved. It's a heartbreaking scene of loss and fear that, in a better film, would be a real gut punch. Ah well. It's on Netflix if you feel like giving it a watch, though I wouldn't be married to the idea of watching the full movie.
Neil likes to lose himself in his work, often disappearing without notice for weeks. After his most recent trip he returns to an angry girlfriend who ends their relationship. After one last night out with a friend for his bachelor party, Neil decides to head out into the wilderness to clear his head. The trip starts well enough, but as he's taking pictures of some insects he gets bitten by something, we're never shown exactly what, and gets a nasty wound on his arm.
At first he basically ignores it, but after several days the wound is shown to have gotten bigger and uglier, with inflamed skin and large pustules. Still, he only cleans the wound and bandages it, hoping that it will get better on its own. Around this time he also begins experiencing some delirium from the illness and develops a sudden craving for insects and animals. Eventually, those cravings turn into something darker, until finally he becomes something subhuman.
There are numerous graphic scenes of him succumbing to his new hunger, but what was really disturbing to me are the scenes of his dreams. At first they start as memories of happier times with his girlfriend, but gradually they begin to get disjointed and fragmented as the illness breaks down his human side. Anyone who has ever been severely ill will recognize the symptoms of fever dreams we sometimes get when sick or under severe stress, but the way it's depicted here is as a downward spiral with no end.
Essentially, it's a front row seat to Neil's slow death, with him gradually realizing that he is losing himself. His memories change from a comfort of happier times to a torment that haunts him even as he loses the awareness of who he once was. Frankly, it's disturbing.
So that's the part the movie gets right. Unfortunately, there is a lot it doesn't. The acting is often stiff and amateurish, with the actors almost seeming like they are just regular people that the producers asked if they wanted to be in a movie. And the cinematography is real B-movie grade stuff, with wide shots that serve no purpose except to keep the audience at arms distance instead of pulling us in, or terrible lighting that makes it hard to know exactly what's happening.
But the worst aspect of the movie by far is the directing. The pacing is so bad that it makes the movie almost unwatchable. The only way I could get through it was by skipping ahead several minutes at a time to avoid overly long scenes that took forever to get to anything interesting. Watching a ten minute scene of Neil just sitting in the shadows watching the people of the village have a party was excruciating. Nothing happens, just people walking around and talking, and there are several scenes like that. And they make the odd choice of having his first indiscretions happen off screen, only hinting at the events in brief flashbacks, but bring us along for numerous animal and insect feasts.
They also linger on his loved ones, who eventually begin to realize something is wrong because Neil has been gone so long, but bizarrely these plot lines are started but never finished. So much screen time is devoted to them calling one another and asking if anyone had seen him that finishing the movie without any of them ever finding him or figuring out what happened just makes you wonder why they bothered including them at all.
Better editing might have shaved 30 minutes or so from the film and made it a better watch, but in truth it had so many problems that I'm not sure. There's a kernel of a good idea in the story, but the execution of that idea is completely muddled by dead-end story lines, bad filming, and directionless directing. Which is too bad, because some of the stuff here is pretty emotionally loaded, like the scene of Neil sobbing after losing several days to his fever and picking up his camera to try and bring back some sense of who he used to be and the things he once loved. It's a heartbreaking scene of loss and fear that, in a better film, would be a real gut punch. Ah well. It's on Netflix if you feel like giving it a watch, though I wouldn't be married to the idea of watching the full movie.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe film was shot entirely on location. No sets were used.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $5,00,000(अनुमानित)
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 26 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.35 : 1
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