19.2 C
Miami
Sunday, February 23, 2025

Netflix adds ravenous zombie movie I adore — and it’s 95% on Rotten Tomatoes

- Advertisement -spot_imgspot_img
- Advertisement -spot_imgspot_img

They’re the most unlikely of film stars. Yet zombies, the rotting, lurching undead with an insatiable craving for flesh and blood are tailor-made for movies. Be they solo or en masse in spectacular ravaging hoards, they’ve earned their place on the big screen with their own distinctive style of horror, one that’s proved to be extraordinarily malleable and adaptable. Musicals, comedies, romances, you name it, they’ve all got their own zombie versions. Now they’re invading Netflix in style, courtesy of one of the best and most popular movies from the genre, Train To Busan (2016), which has been added on Tuesday, 11 February (UK fans can watch via ITVX or rent on Prime Video).

Regarded as the father of the “Hollywood zombie”, George Romero put them firmly on our radar with the legendary Night Of The Living Dead (1968), giving audiences their first taste of the infected, flesh-craving monsters we’re familiar with now. Less than twenty years later, the first South Korean zombie movie emerged, A Monstrous Corpse (1981) and, although it was an investigative drama rather than a blood-soaked horror, it was the foundation for movies that are perhaps now more immediately associated with filmmakers from the East than the West.

Train to Busan picked up 36 awards globally (Image credit: Studio Canal)

One of a handful of horrors to be shown at Cannes over the years, Yeong Sang-Ho’s Train To Busan made its debut at a midnight screening in 2016, marking the start of its stampede to critical acclaim and international box office success. Made for just $8 million, it raked in over $92.7 million, picking up 36 awards around the world on the way. The premise was simple. A cynical workaholic father is taking his daughter to visit her mother but, unbeknown to them, a sick woman has boarded their train, changed into a zombie, attacked a guard and the virus is spreading ferociously. The father urgently tries to protect his little girl from the swarm of monsters overrunning the train, while other characters realize they were personally responsible for the outbreak.

Source link

- Advertisement -spot_imgspot_img

Highlights

- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest News

- Advertisement -spot_img