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IMDbPro

Beyond Re-Animator

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Jeffrey Combs, Jason Barry, and Elsa Pataky in Beyond Re-Animator (2003)
B-HorrorDark ComedyZombie HorrorComedyHorrorSci-Fi

After 13 years in prison, the mad scientist from Re-Animator (1985) gets a new chance to experiment with the arrival of a young prison doctor, who secretly hopes to learn to reanimate dead p... Read allAfter 13 years in prison, the mad scientist from Re-Animator (1985) gets a new chance to experiment with the arrival of a young prison doctor, who secretly hopes to learn to reanimate dead people. Good intentions turn to horror.After 13 years in prison, the mad scientist from Re-Animator (1985) gets a new chance to experiment with the arrival of a young prison doctor, who secretly hopes to learn to reanimate dead people. Good intentions turn to horror.

  • Director
    • Brian Yuzna
  • Writers
    • José Manuel Gómez
    • H.P. Lovecraft
    • Miguel Tejada-Flores
  • Stars
    • Jeffrey Combs
    • Tommy Dean Musset
    • Jason Barry
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Brian Yuzna
    • Writers
      • José Manuel Gómez
      • H.P. Lovecraft
      • Miguel Tejada-Flores
    • Stars
      • Jeffrey Combs
      • Tommy Dean Musset
      • Jason Barry
    • 113User reviews
    • 86Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Beyond Re-animator
    Trailer 1:25
    Beyond Re-animator

    Photos27

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    Top cast22

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    Jeffrey Combs
    Jeffrey Combs
    • Dr. Herbert West
    Tommy Dean Musset
    • Young Howard 'Howie' Phillips
    Jason Barry
    • Dr. Howard Phillips
    Bárbara Elorrieta
    • Emily Phillips
    Elsa Pataky
    Elsa Pataky
    • Laura Olney
    Ángel Plana
    • Kitchen Zombie
    Javier Sandoval
    Javier Sandoval
    • Cop 1
    Santiago Segura
    Santiago Segura
    • Speedball
    Lolo Herrero
    Lolo Herrero
    • Sergeant Moncho
    Enrique Arce
    Enrique Arce
    • Cabrera
    Nico Baixas
    • Moses
    Simón Andreu
    Simón Andreu
    • Warden Brando
    Joaquín Ortega
    Joaquín Ortega
    • Officer Falcon
    Raquel Gribler
    • Nurse Vanessa
    Daniel Ortiz
    Daniel Ortiz
    • Winni
    César Nebreda
    • Big Dude
    Ignasi Vidal
    • S.W.A.T. Officer 1
    Miquel Àngel Ripeu
    • S.W.A.T. Officer 2
    • Director
      • Brian Yuzna
    • Writers
      • José Manuel Gómez
      • H.P. Lovecraft
      • Miguel Tejada-Flores
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews113

    5.713.5K
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    Featured reviews

    MercurioKnight

    This is not Re-Animator, it's BEYOND Re-Animator (but is that really a good thing?)

    I think they had the right idea. The basic concept for me had potential. This special element representing 'the soul', energy that could be used to revive someone back to normal once re-animated. Having to kill one source to bring back another has a nice twist to it.

    The opening and closing of the film was cool (with the intro of West and him walking away into the mist). I could deal with the new protege, Howard, or whatever his name is, though I would have rather he used his native accent to give the film some more flavour. (but having Dan Cain back would have been so much better)

    My first biggest problem with the film comes from what they do with the basic concept. To me, they never fully realized it. I kept waiting for everything to go to the next level... especially when the riot broke out, I was hoping they'd take the massacre at the end of the first movie and just let loose. That never happened. Instead, they opted for a couple truly idiotic moments and what at the end of the day felt like a stale re-mix of elements from the first and second. I didn't want to see reflective moments from the first, though that might have been fine in a better movie... nor of Bride. I wanted something taken to a new level, much like Bride did after the original.

    They had the concept. They had the setting. And I believe that Brian Yuzna can still direct a decent movie had he a good script and cast to work with. More and more, I wish they could have convinced Stuart Gordon to come back and take his rightful place as director of Beyond Re-Animator. I loved Dagon, very much showing he's still got it (not to mention the fact I love Re-Animator and enjoy From Beyond), and I could only imagine what he could have done with Beyond Re-Animator.

    I think the script is the biggest fault of the film. Performances or the direction of those performances is next. The only truly golden character in the film is obviously Herbert West, with Jeffry Combs doing a wonderful job given the material he has to work with. I would rather they focused more on West than the silly little romance between Howard and that reporter (with an annoying voice recorded, which I believe must be because of bad dubbing to hide a thick accent. And if it wasn't dubbing, please dear god go back in time and cast someone else). The reporter subplots would have been better written out than to have to sit through them again. The only part I could get behind with that whole mess was at the end, when Howard had lost it and he was going back and forth calling out Emily (his sister) and Laura, the reporter, mixing the two up in his head, and just before that cradling her head in his hands. From that point on, the film was back on target... exactly as it should of been all along. Too bad there was only a couple minutes left in the film.

    Don't get me started about the final Rat shadow sequence.

    All I have to say in regards to the Warden was that he was no Dr Hill.

    Overall, I was left with a bitter taste in my mouth. A disappointment. At the back of my mind, there was a hope that it'd be at least on the level of Bride. Not great, but a decent Re-Animator fix. The final result is anything but.
    Tzsm98

    Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blood Red

    This third Re-Animator movie delivered what any fan of the series would expect. The formerly dead jitterbug about after receiving a dose of reagent from Herbert West. West again has a love stricken assistant. West's assistant is again in a love triangle with West's would-be nemesis. So, why not pop Re-animator or Bride of Re-animator in if there is nothing new? Good question. Here are some reasons

    1- The effects in this film are top notch.

    2- Jeffrey Combs again shows his acting chops playing Herbert West.

    3- There is a new twist to the re-animation process that shows some promise in `clinical trials'.

    There are some really convincing effects throughout the film. Makeup and effects are more than window dressing in a film of this nature. Inadequate attention to either would have dropped the value of this film immediately. You believe that these guys have been dead and now no longer are. They are much more believable than JarJar Binks.

    Herbert West is over a decade older in this film. Combs takes this maturity and adds it to the character he molded in the previous efforts. It's obvious that he is the same Dr. West yet it is also obvious that time has added to the character. Even more interesting, at the beginning of the film is a flashback where Combs plays the younger West. It's an opportunity to compare the two portrayals almost side by side. The essence of West remains, the speech pattern, the physicality remain. What Combs added to West's character is a veil to the intensity. What was once a roaring fire is now under control. He is no less determined, just a bit more subdued in expressing it.

    The addition to the re-animation process, which I will not discuss in particular, adds another moral dimension to the question of the correctness of bringing back the dead. Although this moral dimension is directly addressed in the film, Medical Ethics 101 it is not. The ethical question is covered briefly and in the context of the fate of West's nemesis. As with all Re-animator activity conducted by West time is valuable and little of it is wasted. Events are happening rapidly and under less than ideal circumstances.

    The DVD version has an music video on it, which was a surprise. It also has a `making of' short that should have had about another five or six days of work done to it before including it. It does have interviews with the principle actors and with the director. Have your subtitles turned on, the actors, with two exceptions speak Spanish even during the clips from the movie included in the short.

    As any good sequel will, this one leaves open the possibility of yet another Re-animator movie. Hopefully the production quality will continue its improvement. Maybe Bruce Abbott and Barbara Crampton can be re-animated for the fourth film.
    8claudio_carvalho

    Excellent and Very Funny Cult Trash-Movie

    After thirteen years in a prison ruled by a very mean director, Dr. Herbert West (Jeffrey Combs) is invited to be the assistant of the new-comer Dr. Howard Phillips (Jason Barry), a brilliant resident, in the penitentiary infirmary. After being introduced to each other, Dr. Phillips discloses that the last experiment of Dr. West killed his sister thirteen years ago, when he was a boy, and he became fascinated with the possibility of bringing dead people back to life. The journalist Laura Olney (Elsa Pataky), who is covering a matter for her newspaper in the prison, has an affair with Dr. Phillips, and they fall in love for each other. However, the experience of Dr. West looses control and the place becomes a branch of hell. "Beyond Re-Animator" was a great surprise for me. I did not expect anything interesting in this sequel, but I decided to risk, based on the names of Brian Yuzna and Jeffrey Combs. When I saw twice the microphone mistakenly in the scene in the beginning of the movie, when Dr. West is having a conversation with Sergeant Moncho (Lolo Herrero) in his cell, I thought that I was going to lose my time watching this film. However, "Beyond Re-Animator" is an excellent and very funny trash-movie, with a great potential of cult-movie. The story is very bloody and has lots of black humor and gore, recalling the style of Peter Jackson's "Braindead". This movie is a worthwhile sequel of the cult "Re-Animator" and "Bride of Re-Animator". Along the credits, there is another very funny scene. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Re-Animator – Fase Terminal" ("Re-Animator – Terminal Phase")
    7The_Void

    More great gory fun!

    As a big fan of the Re-Animator series, I was quite excited when I found out that a second sequel was being made. Unfortunately, however, due to poor distribution in the UK; it has taken me over a year to find a copy. But now that I've finally seen it, I am pleased to report that Beyond Re-Animator doesn't disappoint! It is now 13 years after the infamous massacre of the second film and Herbert West has found himself in jail. However, you can't keep a good re-animator down, and being in jail doesn't stop his experiments, especially when a new doctor; Dr Howard Phillips arrives on the scene.

    Jeffrey Combs returns as the insane scientist, Dr Herbert West. Unfortunately, Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott) from the other two films doesn't return, but Re-Animator was always Combs' series anyway, so although it's a loss; the show must, and most certainly does go on. Jeffrey Combs was made for the part of Herbert West; his portrayal of the character is absolutely wonderful. He catches just the right atmosphere of a man obsessed by his work in all three films. He also manages to tie a lot of humour in, which is obviously a good thing for a tongue in cheek movie such as this. The rest of the cast acts as a support to Combs, and succeeds fairly well in that respect but none really impress much on their own. Jason Barry (who had a small role in the rubbish movie; Titanic) acts as Dan Cain's replacement and Herbert West's new understudy; Howard Phillips. He never really impresses in the movie and it would seem that his main objective in the movie is to make West look more insane, and through his subdued performance; he does that well. Elsa Patasky looks good as the lady of the film, but her performance is terrible; even embarrassingly bad at times. Simón Andreu is the only member of the cast other than Combs that really impresses, and he plays the prison warden; the villain of the piece.

    Gorehounds won't be disappointed with this film, I can guarantee you that! Re-Animator became infamous for it's heavy amounts of overly gory sequences, and this movie features lots of them too; from an exploding chest to a severed torso that walks on it's hands; this movie has it all. Many sequels, particularly horror sequels just recap the original with more gore, but the Re-Animator sequels haven't so far, all have something new. In Bride of Re-Animator (Re-Animator 2), a new idea about animated different parts of a dead corpse emerged, and in this film the new idea is adding the 'soul' to the re-animated body. It is admirable for the series to take that route as for a film of this ilk, more gore could simply be added and it's fans would almost certainly happy, but here you get a story to chew on aswell.

    The last two films ended with a riot, which has become a part of the Re-Animator tradition, and this film doesn't break that great tradition. The last 30 minutes or so are absolutely insane, with many things going on all at once and that is sure to please fans of the original movies. Overall, Beyond Re-Animator is an incredible gory ride and is recommended to anyone with the stomach for this sort of movie.
    8w00f

    Tongue in Cheek. Whose Cheek? Whose Tongue?

    I loved the first Re-Animator movie. "Bride of Re-Animator" was OK. This one is over-the-top, completely twisted, and just plain clean, gory, bloody, guts spattering about, eyeballs crawling around, penis-attacks-rat fun.

    This isn't a movie that takes itself seriously, and you shouldn't, either.

    Jeffrey Combes is wonderful, as always, as Dr. Herbert West. Dr. West has figured out (or so he thinks) what was missing in his previous "experiments." Needless to say, it doesn't work as planned (hey, it's "just a theory"), and much mayhem ensues. Much. Much more than in the first two movies. Think "Attica" meets "Night of the Living Dead" meets "Freaky Friday." Yes, it's that far off the deep end.

    I would recommend this film highly to anyone who enjoys a humorous splatter flick. If you're not a deranged gorehound, you probably won't like this one. Speaking as a longtime deranged gorehound, however, I can safely say that this is one of the finest films ever made in its genre, and certainly worthy of several Academy Awards.

    I did mention that I was deranged, right?

    Yeah, I did. And if you are, too, see this movie. And don't forget to watch the absolutely classic "Move Your Dead Bones" video that also comes on the DVD. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll like it better than "Cats."

    Kudos to Brian Yuzna!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The only installment of the Re-Animator series not filmed in the United States. It was entirely shot in Spain.
    • Goofs
      When Emily searches the house for the strange noise right before being surprised by her brother, she crosses the living room. A cameraman is visible in the large wall mirror for the entire tracking shot.
    • Quotes

      Howard Phillips: God damn you!

      Herbert West: Religion has nothing to do with this.

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits are accompanied by a fight between a rat and the warden's severed penis.
    • Alternate versions
      US premiere of the film, other than isolated festival screenings, was on Sci-Fi channel, which heavily trimmed gore and sex. Several scenes were cut out entirely.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Kill Count: Beyond Re-Animator (2003) Kill Count (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Re-Animator Theme
      Composed by Richard Band

      Published by Re-Animator Music

      Main Title Music by Reyn Ouwehand

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 25, 2003 (Spain)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Повернення реаніматора
    • Filming locations
      • Prisión Modelo, Valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Castelao Producciones
      • Fantastic Factory (Filmax)
      • Filmax
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $302,586
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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