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IMDbPro

Le retour des morts-vivants 3

Original title: Return of the Living Dead III
  • 1993
  • 12
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Melinda Clarke in Le retour des morts-vivants 3 (1993)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
93 Photos
B-HorrorBody HorrorDark ComedyZombie HorrorHorror

Having recently witnessed the horrific results of a top secret project to bring the dead back to life, a distraught youth performs the operation on his girlfriend after she's killed in a mot... Read allHaving recently witnessed the horrific results of a top secret project to bring the dead back to life, a distraught youth performs the operation on his girlfriend after she's killed in a motorcycle accident.Having recently witnessed the horrific results of a top secret project to bring the dead back to life, a distraught youth performs the operation on his girlfriend after she's killed in a motorcycle accident.

  • Director
    • Brian Yuzna
  • Writer
    • John Penney
  • Stars
    • J. Trevor Edmond
    • Melinda Clarke
    • Kent McCord
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Brian Yuzna
    • Writer
      • John Penney
    • Stars
      • J. Trevor Edmond
      • Melinda Clarke
      • Kent McCord
    • 167User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    Official Trailer

    Photos93

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    J. Trevor Edmond
    J. Trevor Edmond
    • Curt Reynolds
    Melinda Clarke
    Melinda Clarke
    • Julie Walker
    • (as Mindy Clarke)
    Kent McCord
    Kent McCord
    • Colonel John Reynolds
    James T. Callahan
    James T. Callahan
    • Colonel Peck
    Sarah Douglas
    Sarah Douglas
    • Colonel Sinclair
    Abigail Lenz
    • Mindy
    Jill Andre
    Jill Andre
    • Chief Scientist
    Michael Decker
    • Science Technician
    Billy Kane
    • Sentry
    Mike Moroff
    Mike Moroff
    • Santos
    Julian Scott Urena
    • Mogo
    • (as Fabio Urena)
    Pía Reyes
    Pía Reyes
    • Alicia
    • (as Pia Reyes)
    Sal Lopez
    Sal Lopez
    • Felipe
    Dana Lee
    Dana Lee
    • Store Owner
    Michael Deak
    Michael Deak
    • Cop #1
    • (as Michael S. Deak)
    Michael Northern
    • Squad Soldier
    Basil Wallace
    Basil Wallace
    • Riverman
    Joe Sikorra
    Joe Sikorra
    • Squad Leader
    • Director
      • Brian Yuzna
    • Writer
      • John Penney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews167

    5.917.8K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Return of the Living Dead III' is a divisive installment, diverging from the comedic elements of its predecessors. It is lauded for its darker tone and poignant love story, alongside impressive gore and special effects. However, it faces criticism for inconsistent zombie behavior, plot inconsistencies, and pacing problems. Despite mixed reactions, many appreciate its effort to innovate within the franchise, though it struggles to replicate the original's appeal.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    7Gafke

    GenX Zombies

    Curt, a GenXer army brat, is madly in love with Julie, a Gothy punk girl with a fascination for the morbid. In order to impress her, Curt swipes his dads clearance card and the two lovebirds sneak into the high security testing facilities of the military base. Curt's dad, a high ranking military official, is involved in some pretty sick experiments which center around the reanimating powers of the chemical known as 245 Trioxin. After witnessing a gruesome resurrection, Curt and Julie flee, have sex and find out that Curt's dad is being transferred. Rather than be torn asunder, the two run away together. But a terrible motorcycle accident cuts their plans - and Julie's life - short. Now it's back to the base to reanimate his beloved, but even though the resurrected Julie seems normal, it's only a matter of time before her dead body rots, and her human emotions are replaced with an insatiable hunger for living human brains.

    This third installment in the ROTLD series avoids the campy black comedy of the first film, and the utter stupidity of the second. It falls somewhere right smack between the two and ends up being halfway decent. There's some great scenes of cutting, scarification and body mutilation as Julie discovers that self inflicted pain can temporarily curb her nasty appetite. Whether or not this was an intentional comment on the habits of GenX teens to mutilate themselves to curb feelings of depression, I don't know, but it's quite effective and, considering that this came out in 1993, rather timely as well. Julie ends up resembling a Cenobite rather than a zombie, decked out in leather, chains and broken glass, but I'm not complaining. There's a LOT of gore, most of which takes place in the military labs as zombies are fitted with harnesses, lobotomized with power drills, held together with metal exoskeletons and, in general, end up resembling an S&M orgy gone horribly wrong. It's pretty nasty, graphic stuff, but the zombies themselves are pretty cool looking, especially one who ends up looking like a freaky, bipedal giraffe.

    The story isn't anything new, but some of the acting (especially that of Mindy Clarke as Julie) is pretty good and the zombie effects are impressive. The ending is a downer, but not as grim and disheartening as it could have been.

    All in all, it's fairly enjoyable. It's much better than Part 2 was, anyway.
    7acedj

    Pretty good, for what it is

    Here we have the third installment in the ROTLD series. It is a Romeo and Juliet-ish tale about ill fated love. Curt is an army brat that met a girl that borders on beigg goth. Curt's father is in charge of a project that will use the trioxin to create an army of undead super soldiers. To impress his girlfriend Julie, they sneak into the army base and witness some experiments. Because these experiments end up failing epically, Curt finds out his father is being reassigned and they must move. Curt chooses Julie over his father and they flee. While on the road they are in an accident that claims Julie's life. Curt uses the trioxin to reanimate her and the zombie fun begins. I liked this better than the first two installments. It was a different take on this subclass of zombie, and the humor was cut way down. Melinda Clark steals every scene she is in as Julie. The rest of the cast, the acting is on par with what one might expect from this kind of film.
    7Captain_Couth

    Part III and hopefully the last.

    Return of the Living Dead III (1993) was released upon the 25th anniversary of the release of Night of the Living Dead (1968). Instead of making another bad spoof, Brian Yuzna wisely decided to make a return to the basics. A creepy and dark horror film. A young military brat and his girl are fooling around on a motorcycle and she's killed in a fatal accident. Grief stricken and severely sprung, the kid takes his girl to the army base where his dad works and takes her to a secret lab and revives her. Sadly the boy doesn't know what he's unleashed and this young "frankenstein" has to destroy his little "creation". If you're going to watch this movie please avoid the "rated" version. As in all of Brian Yuzna's films he likes to make his flicks over the top and very gory. The "family" rental companies carry the "rated" version so "look out" for the "unrated" label. If not then you'll be treated to a bunch of freeze frames and badly cut scenes. A sad tale about true love.

    Recommended.

    Let's hope this ends the series. If it does then it'll end on a high note.
    7capkronos

    Very good for this zombie subgenre

    Teen army brat Curt (J. Trevor Edmond) is so in love with wild, sexy punkette Julie (Mindy Clarke) that he decides not to let her untimely death in a motorcylce accident keep them apart. Thankfully his father (Kent McCord) works at a top-secret military lab experimenting on bringing the dead back to life. Curt sneaks in and uses the "Trioxin" gas to revive Julie, then spends the rest of the movie watching helplessly in horror at her mental and physical deterioration and increasing hunger for human flesh!

    Having very little to do with the two previous comic RETURN titles helps Part III overcome familiarity, while director Brian Yuzna delivers loads of brain-munching horror without losing sight of the compelling, tragic central romance. Excellent FX work by Steve Johnson and many others, including Julie's amazing transformation from whimpering ghoul to multi-pierced, S&M femme fatale zombie queen.

    This film was released in R and unrated versions. Shoot for the latter.

    Score: 7 out of 10
    7Chromium_five

    One of the craziest movies of the 80's. A must-see.

    I was reluctant to watch the third part of the series (I have no interest in the second) as I knew the character of Burt would no longer be joining us. The death of Burt in the first ROTLD is one of the most unfortunate things in all cinema and had me depressed for weeks. I had further reservations when the logic of the first one was changed significantly--people in this movie are turned into zombies when bitten by one, which was not part of the original at all (this was also not the case in "Night of the Living Dead," but Romero put it into the sequel. It seems to be a weird detail that was obliquely added to the zombie genre and is now taken for granted). There is also some uncertainty as to why the resurrected character Julie even wants brains. In the first one, the zombies can feel themselves decomposing and only brains can relieve the pain--in this one, she is just inexplicably hungry, and brains... make her full, or something. This leads to a rather hilarious scene in which she's stuffing all sorts of food into her mouth at a gas station and had me wondering if the movie was going to be idiotic, but at that moment the director hits the clutch and the plot veers into full throttle awesomeness. (And in retrospect it's not that big a plot hole; maybe she can't feel herself rotting yet but her body knows it's happening and desires brains.)

    We begin following Julie and her boyfriend Curt (weird side note: these are the names of my aunt and uncle!) as they aimlessly run through the streets while pursued by a gang, with Julie becoming more insatiably hungry by the minute. It's top-notch horror. A lot of horror movies have you wondering, "Why don't they just get HELP or something," but here it is clearly impossible for the police or medics to do anything, and you're as stumped about what the characters should do as they are. There's no feeling superior to them, a hard trick to pull off in a horror movie. Eventually, Julie attempts suicide and is rescued by a black man dressed like a Jedi Knight, and here I was no longer sad that Burt wasn't around because this new fellow actually out-awesomes Burt. He takes them to a room in a sewer which he has converted into some sort of temple and announces, "YOU CAN CALL ME... RIVERMAN," whereby I was able to conclude that if I were somehow put in charge of the MPAA rating system, I would rate every movie based on whether or not Riverman was in it (Riverman being played by cult actor Basil Wallace, best known as Screwface from the badass action movie "Marked for Death"). It is while in Riverman's lair that Julie discovers extreme pain can take her mind off brains, leading to the famous scene wherein she mutilates herself beyond recognition (some may see this as another plot hole, since the original ROTLD zombies needed brains to take their minds off pain, but I believe Julie still has enough of a conscience that she prefers the pain to killing). The astute viewer will realize here that all this eating and cutting on Julie's part seems to be referencing some actual real-life issues, although I'm not entirely sure what the point of it is. It might be just a joke, but the tone is dark enough that it makes a sobering addition to an already depressing story.

    There's more awesomeness that I don't want to spoil here--I will only say that the freaky zombies from the first movie make an appearance at the end, bringing it all to a chaotic conclusion. Mindy Clarke is AMAZING as Julie--she makes a believable performance out of a role that is far different than the usual teen-horror "scream queen." The doomed bond between her and Curt works as both straight horror and tragedy, and the slick direction and elaborate set pieces make this a fine action flick as well. It's not quite as fun as the first in the series, but it's definitely impressive on its own, and I can honestly rate it as one of the better movies of the 80's. Check it out. 7/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Brian Yuzna's commentary, Trimark did not require the film to use the same actors or have the same comedic elements as the previous two films but they did require the zombies (including Julie) crave and eat brains.
    • Goofs
      When they are first testing the Trioxin gas, one of the signs that it's working is that the corpse attains a heartbeat. Yet, in the first movie, the two characters who were first exposed to the gas *lost* their heartbeats, yet were still mobile. Therefore, heart rate should not be used as an indicator of Trioxin's effectiveness.
    • Quotes

      Curt Reynolds: Julie, are you eating him? You should stop it.

    • Alternate versions
      The Trimark/Lionsgate DVD is the heavily censored R-rated version. The uncut, unrated version has since surfaced on the 2016 Vestron Blu-Ray.
    • Connections
      Featured in Au coeur de la nuit: Pierre Woodman und Brian Yuzna (2007)

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    FAQ22

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    • What are the differences between the R-Rated cut and the Unrated version of the movie?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 10, 1994 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Return of the Living Dead III
    • Filming locations
      • 7th Street Bridge, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bandai Visual Company
      • Ozla Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $54,207
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,810
      • Oct 31, 1993
    • Gross worldwide
      • $54,207
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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