Crazies
Timothy Olyphant Actor , Radha Mitchell Actor , Danielle Panabaker Actor , Joe Anderson Actor , Christie Lynn Smith Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Profanity,Gore
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Crazies
Theatrical Release Date: 2009 (USA) / 2010 02 26 (USA)
UPC: 013132139890
Studio: Starz/Anchor Bay
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Profanity, Gore]
Summary: Sahara director Breck Eisner teams with screenwriters Ray Wright (Pulse) and Scott Kosar (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) to give George A. Romero's underrated 1973 shocker a shiny new makeover in this update starring Timothy Olyphant and Radha Mitchell. Perform a Google search on "small-town America," and eventually you'll stumble across Ogden Marsh, a picturesque hamlet situated a safe distance from the nearest big city, and full of friendly faces. The citizens of Ogden Marsh are happy, albeit unremarkable people, but they're about to discover just how fragile their warm slice of the American dream really is. When a mysterious toxin transforms the locals into murderous maniacs, it's up to Sheriff David Dutton (Olyphant) to find out why a man who was once an upstanding citizen would attempt to massacre the local youth baseball team, and a caring father would burn his beloved family alive. Within hours the town has descended into total chaos, and the government has ordered it quarantined. Anyone who attempts to escape will be shot on sight, whether they're infected or not. Realizing that their only hope for survival is to fight through the madness that has consumed their once-quiet town, Sheriff Dutton, his pregnant wife, Judy (Mitchell), his deputy Russell (Joe Anderson), and frightened medical center assistant Becca (Danielle Panabaker) wage an epic struggle to discover the source of this malevolent scourge while fending off their infected friends and neighbors. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Horror
Features:
Audio commentary with director Breck Eisner
Behind the scenes with director Breck Eisner
Paranormal pandemics
The George A. Romero template
Make-up mastermind: Rob Hall in action
The Crazies motion comic episodes 1 & 2
Visual effects in motion
Storyboards: building a scene
Crazies
Format: Blu-ray
Release Date: 06/29/2010
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 2.40:1
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, PCM null
Runtime: 101 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English
Subtitles: English,Spanish
Jason Buchanan
Lest we make the mistake of underestimating George A. Romero's influence in the realm of contemporary horror cinema, now might be a good time to take pause and reconsider. Director Breck Eisner's remake of Romero's intensely grim 1973 horror thriller isn't just a rousing exercise in pulse-quickening tension, but an exciting reminder that the man responsible for Night of the Living Dead gave us much more than the iconic, shambling flesh-eaters that lunge at us onscreen and lurk in our nightmares. In some ways, the loony, murderous psychopaths of the original Crazies foreshadow the demonic ragers of Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later and the sequel that followed, and with foreign films like Jaume Balaguer? and Paco Plaza's [REC] embracing the same basic concept, it's obvious Romero's influence isn't limited by language or borders. Much like literary horror icons Bram Stoker and Edgar Allan Poe, Romero has laid a solid foundation for our imaginations to build on. And while the modern reinterpretations of Romero's works may be largely lacking in the stinging social commentary that punctuated many of his own screenplays, efforts like Zack Snyder's surprisingly effective Dawn of the Dead remake and now The Crazies prove that, when handled with care, the central concepts still have the power to shock and entertain. Ogden Marsh is the kind of small, tightly knit community where the local Little League game marks the onset of spring, and the town doctor still knows all of her patients by name. In just 48 hours, however, Main Street will burn. The local water supply has been contaminated with an unidentified toxin that first disorients its victims, and then sends them into a violent, murderous rage. Just as Sheriff David Dutton (Timothy Olyphant) and Deputy Russell Clank (Joe Anderson) begin making headway in their investigation, however, all local communications are terminated and swarms of gas-masked foot soldiers start herding the townspeople into the local high school. Once there, the sick are separated from the healthy and quarantined. Sheriff Dutton's pregnant wife, Judy (Radha Mitchell), the local doctor, is running a temperature. Upon learning that Judy is being held for examination, the determined sheriff vows to rescue her and escape. Once they've managed to get out of the school, however, Sheriff Dutton, Deputy Clank, Judy, and frightened nurse Becca Darling (Danielle Panabaker) quickly discover that a perimeter has been set up around Ogden Marsh in a last-ditch effort to contain the virus, and that in order to survive they'll have to fend for themselves while fighting for their lives against the people they used to call their friends and neighbors. The biggest surprise about The Crazies is that it actually works. Read any horror-movie message board and you'll quickly discover that a gore-geek's favorite pastime is to whine about how there are no more original ideas and how contemporary filmmakers are cannibalizing their favorite transgressive fright flicks to create watered-down clones suitable for mass consumption. To be fair, they often make some valid points. Even so, deny an entertaining redux solely due to your affection for the original, and you may find yourself missing out on some worthwhile thrills. This is most certainly the case with The Crazies, a film that exists primarily to entertain, yet still retains flashes of the socially conscious themes that made the original so memorable -- especially in the earlier and later scenes. While he might not possess the kind of filmmaking background that would single him out as a master fear-maker, director Eisner (Thoughtcrimes, Sahara) proves that he's perfectly capable of ramping up tensions with competent, effective suspense sequences that more often than not climax in a satisfying pay-off. Sure there are a few too many scenes where someone in peril is rescued in the nick of time, but thanks to the film's brisk pace we're often too busy anticipating what's going to happen next to bemoan the film's occasional contrivances. Scott Kosar and Ray Wright's terse screenplay keeps the action kinetic while skillfully toying with audience expectations regarding a few key characters, and the central players all do a fantastic job of playing up their character motivations and questionable mental states. Respectful re-creations of two of the original film's most shocking scenes (the opening blaze and a fiery front-lawn barbecue) show that the filmmakers' hearts were no doubt in the right place when it came to crafting the remake, and the decision to jettison the original's military/scientist subplot in favor of following the protagonists on their desperate flight serves to better connect the audience to characters they genuinely care about. Oddly enough, by excising this portion of the story, Eisner, Kosar, and Wright successfully manage to temper the heavy-handed approach favored by Romero (a filmmaker who has never been accused of being subtle), and make the authoritarian figures even more intimidating by virtually stripping them of all humanity. Considering Romero's obvious disdain for authority (and the fact that he has an executive producer credit on the film), it's difficult to see him objecting to that approach. The Crazies themselves may be dangerous, but if you're looking for the real enemy, he's the guy wearing military decorations and calling all the shots from behind the scenes. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Mark Isham
Composer (Music Score)
George A. Romero
Executive Producer
Rob Cowan
Producer
Jonathan King
Executive Producer
Michael Aguilar
Producer
Dean Georgaris
Producer
Scott Kosar
Screenwriter
Breck Eisner
Director
Jeff Skoll
Executive Producer
Ray Wright
Screenwriter
Timothy Olyphant
Actor
Radha Mitchell
Actor
Danielle Panabaker
Actor
Joe Anderson
Actor
Christie Lynn Smith
Actor
Brett Rickaby
Actor
Preston Bailey
Actor
John Aylward
Actor
Joe Reegan
Actor
Glenn Morshower
Actor
Larry Cedar
Actor
Gregory Sporleder
Actor
Mike Hickman
Actor
Lisa K. Wyatt
Actor
Justin Welborn
Actor
Chet Grissom
Actor
Tahmus Rounds
Actor
Brett Wagner
Actor
Alex Van
Actor
Tony Winters
Actor
Frank Hoyt Taylor
Actor
Justin Miles
Actor
Marian Green
Actor
E. Roger Mitchell
Actor
Michael Cole
Actor
Mark Oliver
Actor
Lynn Lowry
Actor
Chris Carnel
Actor
Jimmy Waitman
Actor
Jay Pearson
Actor
Kathryn Kim
Actor
Adam Dingeman
Actor
Megan Hensely
Actor
Lori Beth Edgeman
Actor
Michael "Mickey" Cole
Actor
Elizabeth Barrett
Actor
Rachel Storey
Actor
Bruce Aune
Actor
Jacqueline Sherrard
Actor
Mary Lynn Owen
Actor
Pierre Gagnon
Actor
Matthew Lintz
Actor
Wilbur Fitzgerald
Actor
Country: USA


