We Bury The Dead: Movie Review
Cast: Daisy Ridley, Brenton Thwaites, Matt Whelan
Director: Zak Hilditch
Zombies are having a revival currently, thanks to the success of 28 Years Later.
But rather than the brain-chomping creatures that usually pervades the lore, there's a more sensitive and tragic approach to their undead condition.
Following that trend somewhat is We Bury The Dead, a film about what comes next for those affected by an outbreak. However, in Zak Hilditch's film, half a million people are seemingly wiped out instantaneously when an electro-magnetic weapon's accidentally detonated off the south of Australia by the US.
It's here that we find our heroine Ava (Ridley, in a controlled and measured performance) who's gone to try and find her missing husband Mitch, who was in the blast area. Desperate to join the Body Retrieval Unit for her own means, she forms a working relationship with the laissez-faire Clay (Thwaites) and the pair end up heading down south to find Mitch.
Less about the ferocity, Hilditch crafts a journey for Ava that's fuelled seemingly both by guilt and grief as she reminisces on the ups and downs of their relationship. Subtle moments are interspersed throughout - from a wedding to start with to a final devastating reveal, Hilditch's more about ensuring Ava has a story arc to follow than a series of encounters with others behaving terribly or hordes of attackers.
There's a melancholy, eerie edge to the story as it plays out, helped by plenty of shots of abandoned towns and roads, scenes of people collapsed doing what they were doing - a stag party being the most unusual of them all - and of grief at either being left behind or having loved ones come round from the pulse's attack but with no idea of what's happened.
It all builds into an unusually elegaic and slow-paced tale that's hauntingly affecting and smartly done - anchored by Ridley's no-thrills performance, We Bury The Dead is a welcome revival for the genre and a wonderfully different post-apocalyptic take that's as evocative as it is memorable.






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