Michael Scott
Partner / Reviewer
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The zombie sub genre is pretty much on the down and outs as of this moment. It WAS the hottest new craze a few years back (we got through cycles. One year we like werewolves, another vampires, another zombies), but right now about the only mainstream show/movies that really are ongoing is The Walking Dead, which is kind of on its last legs as we speak. However, the idea of undead brain munchers chewing up poor humans is a tried and true cinematic trope, and I was kind of curious about Dead Shack when I watched the trailer for it. Especially since it was billed as a horror comedy instead of straight up horror flick. I wasn’t exactly expecting much from the fledgling Shudder production company, but I’m an easy person when it comes to horror (and a bit of a masochist. The amount of awful horror movies I’ve watched over the years JUST because it was a horror movie is staggering) and I like zombies. Color me a bit surprised when I actually really liked Dead Shack, and was having a good time with the “splatstick” style humor. Besides a few bad lines in the third act (the “neighbor” gets the most of those sadly), the movie is a goofy, bloody good time.
Jason (Matthew Nelson-Mahood), and his best friend’s family are about to head out to the wilderness for a weekend camping trip. His buddy Colin’s (Gabriel LaBelle) family is a bit dysfunctional with father Roger’s (Donavon Stinson) recent divorce, but that’s kind of the setup for these types of films. Dysfunction, conflict and friendship. Colin’s bratty sister Summer (Lizzie Boys) isn’t too thrilled, and neither is Roger’s new girlfriend Lisa (Valerie Tian) isn’t either, but Roger, Colin and James are prepping for the weekend to remember. Sadly the cabin that Roger chose is a bit on the rundown side due to finances, but the boys are willing to make the best of it. While Roger and Lisa get drunk in the cabin, the three teenagers head out to explore, only to run across a house in the woods where they witness their neighbor (Lauren Holly) feed a few local teenagers to what appears like zombies.
Terrified and freaked out, Colin, Jason and Summer come running back to an unbelieving set of adults. However, after a little persuasion, Roger agrees to check out the cabin only to run into a cold blooded killer and her cadre of zombie minions. Minions who will gladly munch on anyone who gets in their way. Realizing that they’re out gunned, and over matched, the three teenagers do the only thing they can do. Arm up with makeshift weapons and hunt some undead munchers before they become lunch themselves.
Acting wise, this isn’t anything wild, but still there were some decent performances. Lauren Holly was great as the hot older woman luring in teenagers to their death (you might remember her as Mary from Dumb and Dumber as well as the redheaded Director on NCIS), but opening her mouth was a bad decision as the writers gave her most of the bad lines. Matthew, Gabriel and Lizzie were solid enough, but most of the really funny moments came from Donavon Stinson’s performance as Roger. He was goofy, big, dumb and just good enough of an actor to elevate the film a good bit from where it COULD have been.
Rating:
Rated R for bloody violence/gore, language throughout, and some sexual references
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• Trailers
Final Score:

Despite not being a “typical” zombie movie, Dead Shack really surprised me. I wasn’t expecting the fun to be had from the splatstick horror comedy, nor the amount of sheer gore that it levied at us. Either way, it ended up being a great watch and one that actually opens up a bit on repeat viewings. The dynamics between Jason and his friends family is touching, and Lauren Holly’s twisted “mother” aspect of the film is great to watch. Luckily they didn’t spend a bunch of time giving us unneeded backstory to WHY there are zombies in our world, but rather just stuck with the nuts and bolts of the battle, making it a lean and fun watch. Shudder’s Blu-ray is amazing on the video front, and has a great audio track as well. Naturally we’re look SUPER slim on extras, but overall this is a fun watch.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Matthew Nelson-Mahood, Lizzie Boys, Gabriel LaBelle
Directed by: Peter Ricq
Written by: Phil Ivanusic, Davila LeBlanc, Peter Ricq
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish
Studio: Shudder
Rated: R
Runtime: 82 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: August 7th, 2018
Recommendation: Fun Watch
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