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Doomsday
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Directed by Neil Marshall.
Three decades after a major country is quarantined in hopes of containing a lethal and highly contagious virus nicknamed "Reaper," signs that the super-bug has resurfaced in a major city prompt desperate specialists to race back into the infected zone to find a cure in director Neal Marshall's (The Descent) miasmic speculative sci-fi thriller. Few could have foreseen the terror that the microorganism known as "Reaper" would unleash upon the unsuspecting population, and when terrified authorities quarantined the entire country in hopes of saving the human race, the streets immediately descended into chaos. Thirty years later, the inhabitants of planet Earth think that they've seen the last of the merciless killer disease, but they couldn't be more wrong. When "Reaper" reappears more powerful than ever in a major city, an elite group of professionals led by Eden Sinclair (Rhona Mitra) are forced to travel back into the sealed-off country where the virus first broke out in order to create a cure and save humankind from certain doom. Now, as the rest of the world anxiously awaits word of their ultimate fate, Eden and her brave team are about to find out that there is indeed a hell, and they are about to journey directly into its black, envenomed heart. Also in the cast are Bob Hoskins and Malcolm McDowell, as well as a host of veterans from Marshall's past productions, including Sean Pertwee, MyAnna Buring, Craig Conway, and Nora-Jane Noone. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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SkyPilotSkyPilot Re:Weekly Theme for June 30: Po ...
by SkyPilot in Weekly Theme
loved it.
"My favorite post-apocalyptic movie is Doomsday, but I still have fond feelings for Waterworld, which is the first post-apocalyptic movie I ever saw. Has anyone mentioned Judge Dredd? I saw this on video after I saw Waterworld, and I was struck by these two very different visions of environmental catastrophe: tons of water, civilization nearly destroyed vs. almost no water, civilization totally urbanized. The Stand made a huge impression on me when I was in junior high. It came on either four nights in a row or four Sundays in a row, can't remember...but anyway, I remember after watching the first installment I was lying in bed, too frightened to go to sleep. I went downstairs to turn the VCR off, because it was taping the next horrifying installment, and I thought it would be able to get to sleep more easily if I stopped the taping. But The Stand had really gotten under my skin, because the next day I started up the second installment. Although I was scared out of my wits I kept h ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Weekly Theme for June 30: Po ...
by mercurial in Weekly Theme
is not interested.
"So many fun little features to choose from, where ever shall I begin? Undeniably the best (or just the most pervasive) films about living in a post-apocalyptic society are: Battle Royale The Matrix Mad Max, The Road Warrior & Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome 12 Monkeys & La Jetee Delicatessen & The City of Lost Children Those straddling the line with extreme lovers and haters: Reign of Fire Tank Girl The Omega Man I Am Legend The Day After Tomorrow Waterworld Akira Doomsday Southland Tales The Matrix Reloaded & The Matrix Revolutions And those that have been cast into the gallows of film history: Titan A.E. Aeon Flux (the movie, not the television series) The Postman Teenage Caveman Battlefield Earth Lastly, Wall-E, which is apparently the best movie ever. I haven't had a chance to see it yet. And The Road, which has yet to come out yet, but after having read the book I am utterly certain the film will be incredible. " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Doomsday delivers
by SkyPilot in SkyPilot Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"One of the most enjoyable movies I've seen recently is a bizarre but cookin' action movie called Doomsday. It's Neil Marshall's (Dog Soldiers, The Descent) latest horror/sci-fi movie. Doomsday is like Escape From New York meets The Stand. It's post-apocalyptic filmmaking at its most enjoyable. And I've got to talk about how regarding violence, this movie has its cake and eats it too. This is a graphic film; for short burts it's as graphic as Passion of the Christ or the new Rambo, which both disturbed me quite a bit. What's strange is that while I found the intense violence in Passion or Rambo to be much more sickening than entertaining, the violence of Doomsday really appealed to me as entertainment. What is even stranger is that one of the themes of Doomsday is the futile and selfish nature of cruelty... so it somehow manages to be really fun-violent while trying to unmask actual fun-violence as an abomination! And it's got killer car chases and fight scenes, too. WTF? This is s ... " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot B+ is the new B (Modern B Movies)
by SkyPilot in B Movies
loved it.
"One of the most enjoyable movies I've seen recently is a bizarre but cookin' action movie called Doomsday. It's Neil Marshall's (Dog Soldiers, The Descent) latest horror/sci-fi movie. Doomsday is like Escape From New York meets The Stand. It's post-apocalyptic filmmaking at its most enjoyable. And I've got to talk about how regarding violence, this movie has its cake and eats it too. This is a graphic film; for short burts it's as graphic as Passion of the Christ or the new Rambo, which both disturbed me quite a bit. What's strange is that while I found the intense violence in Passion or Rambo to be much more sickening than entertaining, the violence of Doomsday really appealed to me as entertainment. What is even stranger is that one of the themes of Doomsday is the futile and selfish nature of cruelty... so it somehow manages to be really fun-violent while trying to unmask actual fun-violence as an abomination! And it's got killer car chases and fight scenes, too. WTF? This is s ... " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Double features
by SkyPilot in B Movies
loved it.
"I've only been to one or two double features in my life, but they were both great experiences. Even though Kill Bill Vol. 1 was preceded by Payback instead of the original Point Blank! Even though the movies at the drive-in were S.W.A.T. and Bad Boys 2! Some double features I'd pay to see anywhere: 1. Escape From New York, then Doomsday 2. Bucket of Blood, then The Abominable Dr. Phibes 3. The Black Scorpion, then The Mighty Peking Man 4. If You Live, Shoot! then Point Blank 5. Dog Soldiers, then Big Trouble in Little China " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie Neil Marshall's Doomsday
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I love Neil Marshall, i really do, well not in that way. Having made Dog Soldiers and The Descent, he's shown himself to be able to take all the best stuff from B-grade monster suspense movies and infuse them with characters you might actually give a damn about. Dog Soldiers is about a group of British Army guys who are sent out on a mission into the deep woods. Only it turns out that they are bait for a family of werewolves. Cut off and alone in a rural farmhouse they have to fight to survive, The Descent is about a group of spelunking girlfirends who find themselves trapped in an extensive and uncharted cave system in North Carolina. Cut off from the world they must fight to survive against a family of pre-human cave creatures. Doomsday is about a plague that sweeps the UK. The survivors are secluded in a walled in Scotland to await their death. 25 years later the plague is back and some of those in the Scottish quarantine zone are still alive, apparently immune. I ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Manly cult cinema gets cooked up in a casserole of ultra-violent goodness in Doomsday, a revved-up, pedal-to-the-metal flick that's sure to strike a bull's eye into the hearts of early-'80s action enthusiasts everywhere. Take one part Escape From New York, one part Vestron Video medieval romp, and a heavy dose of The Road Warrior, and that's Doomsday in a post-apocalyptic piecrust. While to some, the recipe might stink of ridiculous rehash, it's that exact reason that'll drive others to eventually hoist this sucker onto their shelves right next to The Bronx Warriors or Raiders of Atlantis -- satisfied in knowing that they're not alone in their love for tough characters doing tough stuff in tough, time-is-of-the-essence situations. That's not to say that the picture is without its flaws -- far from it. After the stunning achievement of The Descent, many would have expected something superiorly different from what director Neil Marshall delivers here. Akin to a kid playing in a sandbox, the filmmaker toys with many of his favorite genre milestones and mashes them together with the grace of a technically proficient gorilla. The result is a highly entertaining -- yet slightly sloppy -- ride through big-screen future motor mayhem as channeled through 1981's sensibilities. Whether it's Doomsday's John Carpenter-infused introduction or the George Miller bullets-on-the-blacktop chase that serves as the finale, there's little doubt that the movie's gonzo gas tank runs best when it's ceremoniously recycling such high-grade film fuel of days gone by. Unfortunately, for all its dismemberments, retro music cues, and the like, the rest of the flick can't help but feel a bit hollow. While the talent in front of the camera is undeniable (thanks to the likes of Bob Hoskins and Malcolm McDowell), there really is not enough substance to make any of the characters truly iconic. By the time the audience is made to buy a dramatic character death leading into the third act, the moment feels artificial, begging the question as to whether it's purposeful schlock (à la Grindhouse) or just hastily thrown together (à la the Resident Evil series). While that great geek debate might live on years down the road, there's one thing that's for sure -- despite any flak it might deservedly get, Doomsday is one hellacious hoot of a great time that will successfully play time and again to the devotees of blood, bullets, and Mohawks out there in film land. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
 



Community ratings

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lost interest.
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Other opinions

SkyPilot
SkyPilot
loved it.
analogzombie
analogzombie
liked it.
The1TheOnlyJP
The1TheOnlyJP
is neutral about it.
Demndiary
Demndiary
disliked it.
mercurial
mercurial
is not interested.
dhaynes
dhaynes
is not interested.