Thursday, 17 October 2019

Zombieland: Double Tap: Film Review

Zombieland: Double Tap: Film Review


Cast: Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg, Emma Stone, Abigail Breslin, Zoey Deutch

Director: Ruben Fleischer

It may open with a self-effacing voiceover from the familiarly neurotic tones of Jesse Eisenberg, and acknowledge that pop culture has other alternatives for zombie entertainment, but Zombieland: Double Tap barely offers much of a reason to exist other than a nostalgia do-over a decade on.

Taking place a decade after the first proffered guilty pleasures, Double Tap focuses on the core four of the group, Columbus, Wichita, Tallahassee, and Little Rock as they continue to negotiate life in a post-apocalyptic world.
Zombieland: Double Tap: Film Review

When Little Rock ups and leaves, tired of Tallahassee's fatherly yolk, and Wichita walks following Columbus' proposal, the boys are left brooding and directionless amid concerns a new super-zombie is on the rise.

However, they're both pulled into the search for Little Rock sooner than they'd think...

It's incumbent in some ways on a sequel to do something new and exciting.

Zombieland: Double Tap is more interested in repeating the vicarious highs of the first film sadly, than forging on with a new narrative. Ironically, it double dips on itself, rather than double tapping.

Sure, it deepens the nuclear family vibe of what's already occurred and extends the squabbling, but despite initially teasing the zombie elements as being key this time around, it jettisons them save for a finale action sequence that feels piecemeal and bolted on.

Thankfully, Zoey Deutch adds a lot to to the proceedings with her Legally Blonde / Cher from Clueless hybrid tracksuit clad Madison injecting much humour into the narrative which flounders for a reason to flourish other than to rehash insults and relive the tensions between Tallahassee and Columbus.

There are some inventive moments though, specifically a Graceland-set fight sequence that clearly comes from the mind of Deadpool's Rhett Reese, and which shows some flair and panache punching among the undead.

But Zombieland: Double Tap is less interested in making its putrid zombies interesting, and more concerned with referencing pop culture elements from the past decade that the original Zombieland missed or have sprung up during the intervening years.

From the Walking Dead to a Shaun of the Dead homage, this all feels like tired fare, a tale that's as decaying as the undead within.

Zombieland may have been a fresh as comedy horror, but Zombieland: Double Tap is sadly not. It's passable enough fare for a loaded night out, but stripped to its core, its raison d'etre is at best, shaky.

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