Dead Alive [Blu-ray]

Our Price: R 218.00
eBucks cost: 2180
Retail Price: R 340.00
You Save: R 122.00
Delivery Time: 7 to 15 Working Days
Format: DVD
Sign up with Wantitall today and get R50 off your first order!Enhance your order by adding 2 accessories below to your cart,receive FREE DELIVERY!
Enhance Your Order
Evil Dead 2 (25th Anniversary Edition) [Blu-ray]
R 212.00
The Evil Dead [Blu-ray]
R 249.00
Army of Darkness (Screwhead Edition) [Blu-ray]
R 261.00
Return of the Living Dead (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo in Blu-ray Packaging)
R 189.00
Peter Jackson's Bad Taste
R 209.00

Movie Details
  • Format: AC-3
  • Region Code: 1
  • Manufacturer: Lionsgate
  • Release Date: 2011-10-04
Directors
Click to view enlarged image
Dead Alive [Blu-ray]
Previous
Next
1 pictures available.
Product Description
On a quiet street, in a small town, pure evil has tome to stay. Lionel, an innocent young man, is forced to care for his domineering mother and finds the task a whole lot more demanding after she's bitten by the curses Sumatran rat monkey. Passing the point of death, Lionel's mother sucks friends and family into her gruesome existence among the living dead and Lionel is sent spiraling into a ghoulish nightmare. Now a crazed zombie, she soon infects enough people to make it difficult for Lionel, still the faithful son, to keep the neighbors from suspecting that something is terribly wrong. Dead Alive is dripping with state-of-the-art special effects that feature mutilations, rock 'n' roll dismemberments and household appliances, combining into the most bizarre ending ever filmed.
The grossest movie ever made, this quintessential splatter film details the tender story of a henpecked boy, his overbearing mum, and a nasty little Sumerian rat-monkey that turns people into voracious zombies. In lesser hands, this ne plus ultra viscera-fest would be so disturbing as to be nigh-unwatchable, but the incredible energy and imagination of director Peter Jackson makes it a first-class guilty pleasure, with plentiful helpings of gallows humor (the scripture-quoting, kung-fu-dispensing priest is a highlight) and a taboo subtext that Sigmund Freud would have loved. Essential viewing for gorehounds and anyone else with a high tolerance for flying entrails. The director would later tone down the gore (but not the manic enthusiasm) for the sublime Heavenly Creatures and The Frighteners. --Andrew Wright
Peter Jackson proves that if gory is funny, then excessive gory is downright hysterical. As our hapless hero wades through an ankle-deep puddle of blood and entrails, brandishing a lawnmower like a portable Cuisinart at the climax of this zombie-fest, you'll either be screaming with laughter or fleeing in disgust. Timothy Balme stars as the shy mama's boy Lionel, whose controlling shrew of a mother (Elizabeth Moody) starts rotting away, literally, with a vague supernatural disease. Mother dies but refuses to stay down, rising as a flesh-eating zombie infecting everyone she bites. Lionel tries to hide her in the basement, but the victims keep piling up and finally break out when Lionel's blackmailing uncle (a grotesque, leering Ian Watkin) throws a party in the house. It's snack time as the guests become undead hors d'oeuvres and rise again as hungry soldiers of the new zombie army marching on Lionel and his girl Pacquita (the lovely Diana Penalver). New Zealand goremeister Jackson pulls out all stops in this truly outrageous sanguinary comedy, from gross-out gags of oozing puss and rotting body parts at a formal dinner to slapstick antics as Lionel tries to keep his flesh-hungry mother sedated during the funeral to the final Freudian showdown between a now-monstrous mother and the newly liberated Lionel. If you like your horror with a sense of humor or your comedy with gristle, then wade through this taboo-busting bucket of blood. --Sean Axmaker
Customer Comments
Sign Up Today
Partner Links
Enquiries


WantItAll (Pty) Ltd 2005 - 2012 | Unit 8 Eastborough Office Park, 15 Olympia Street, Marlboro, Gauteng, 2063, South Africa | Company Reg No. 2007/024936/07 | VAT No. 4920242924