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Encyclopedia > Zombi 2
Zombi 2

USA theatrical poster
Directed by Lucio Fulci
Produced by Fabrizio De Angelis
Ugo Tucci
Written by Elisa Briganti
Dardano Sacchetti (uncredited)
Starring Tisa Farrow
Ian McCulloch
Richard Johnson
Al Cliver
Auretta Gay
Stefania D'Amario
Olga Karlatos Ugo Bologna Dakkar Franco Fantasia Leo Gavero Mónica Zanchi
Music by Fabio Frizzi Giorgio Cascio Adrianno Giordanell Maurizio Guarini
Cinematography Sergio Salvati
Editing by Vincenzo Tomassi
Distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment (DVD)
Shriek Show (DVD)
Release date(s) Italy August 25, 1979
Running time 91 min
Country Italy
Language Italian (English dub.)
Budget ITL 410,000,000
Preceded by Zombi (aka Dawn of the Dead)
Followed by Zombi 3
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The best-known of Lucio Fulci's films, Zombi 2 (also known as Zombie, Island of the Living Dead, Zombie Flesh Eaters, and Woodoo) sparked an obsession with zombie films across Europe and made Fulci a horror icon. Upon its release in 1979, the film was ridiculed for having no connection to the original Zombi and was scorned for its extremely bloody content, yet the film was a tremendous success. Image File history File links Zombi2poster. ... Lucio Fulci (born June 17, 1927 in Rome, Italy - died March 13, 1996 in Rome, Italy (diabetes-related illness)) was an Italian film director, screenwriter and actor. ... Dardano Sacchetti (born 1944) is an Italian screenwriter most well-known for his work in the horror genre. ... Tisa Farrow (born July 22, 1955) is an American actress. ... Ian McCulloch (born 5 May 1939 in Glasgow) is a British actor. ... Richard Johnson (born July 30, 1927) is a British actor, writer and producer, who starred in several British films of the 1960s and has also had a distinguished stage career. ... Fabio Frizzi (July 2, 1951 - ) is an Italian composer. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Shriek Show is a subsidiary of Media Blasters DVD releasing company, specalizing in obscure horror and exploitation films. ... Image File history File links Flag_of_Italy. ... August 25 is the 237th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (238th in leap years), with 128 days remaining. ... For the Smashing Pumpkins song, see 1979 (song). ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Zombi 3 (known as Zombie Flesh Eaters 2 in the UK) is the in-name-only 1988 followup to Zombi 2, itself an unofficial sequel to 1979s Dawn of the Dead (released in Italy as Zombi). ... Lucio Fulci (born June 17, 1927 in Rome, Italy - died March 13, 1996 in Rome, Italy (diabetes-related illness)) was an Italian film director, screenwriter and actor. ... World map exhibiting the location of Europe. ... For the Smashing Pumpkins song, see 1979 (song). ... Dawn of the Dead, is a prominent 1978 zombie horror film which contributed to the rise of the so-called splatter craze in horror films. ...

Contents

Background

Zombi 2 is a pseudo-sequel to George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead. Dawn was re-edited and re-scored for European markets by Romero's collaborator, Italian horror master Dario Argento. Argento released his new version of Dawn of the Dead as Zombi and treated it as a standalone story, not a continuation of Romero's Night of the Living Dead. George Romero at the 2006 DragonCon George Andrew Romero (born February 4, 1940) is an American director, writer, editor and actor. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Dario Argento. ... Night of the Living Dead is a 1968 black-and-white independent horror film directed by George A. Romero. ...


Fulci's Zombi 2 was in actual fact already in production at the time of Romero's success. It was not a film created to "cash-in" on the original Zombi's popularity, however the name was taken in order to show a link between the films.


Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

An apparently abandoned yacht drifts into New York Harbor, and the Harbor Patrol investigates. On board, a huge rotting man (Captain Haggerty) kills Marty, one of the patrolmen, by tearing out his neck with his teeth. The remaining patrolman Bill manages to knock the hulking man into the sea by blasting him with his revolver several times.


A young woman named Anne Bowels (Tisa Farrow) is questioned by the police when it is discovered that the boat belonged to her father (Ugo Bologna). She does not know anything except that her father left for a tropical island to do research. A reporter named Peter West (Ian McCulloch) is assigned by his news editor (director Lucio Fulci in a cameo) to get the story on the mysterious boat. Anne and Peter meet on the boat and decide to work together after finding a note from Anne's father. The note says that he is on the island of Matool and that he has come down with a strange disease. Anne and Peter enlist the aid of a seafaring couple, Brian Hull (Pier Luigi Conti) and Susan Barrett (Auretta Giannone), to help find Matool. Tisa Farrow (born July 22, 1955) is an American actress. ... Ian McCulloch (born 5 May 1939 in Glasgow) is a British actor. ...


On Matool, Dr. David Menard (Richard Johnson) is hard at work studying the island's secrets. Matool is a cursed place where the dead rise to attack the living, and Menard is determined to find out why. When Anne, Peter, Brian, and Susan reach Matool, the island itself seems to come alive, vomiting forth all the dead buried on the island to kill them. Richard Johnson (born July 30, 1927) is a British actor, writer and producer, who starred in several British films of the 1960s and has also had a distinguished stage career. ...


In the end, all of the island's inhabitants and Susan fall victim to the walking dead; Brian is also infected and dies soon afterwards. Peter and Anne manage to escape by boat, taking the now undead Brian with them as evidence for their story. Shortly after the group leaves the island and reaches the open ocean they receive a radio message that, to their great horror and dismay, the undead have attacked New York City. Marty, the policeman killed by the zombie - and his killer itself - have infected the New York population, explosively multiplying the zombie army beyond any hope of control.


Memorable Scenes

The film became infamous for two scenes in particular, aided by special effects. One features a zombie (Ramon Bravo) fighting a shark underwater. The actor scheduled to fight the shark was unable to perform the day the sequence was to be shot, so the shark's trainer was used instead. The other infamous scene is where a character has her eye gouged out on a splintered piece of wood very slowly and painfully. This scene in particular was edited from many previous releases, but is intact on all three current DVD versions. The film is also remembered among fans for its creepy, synthesized opening theme.


Zombi 2 in Europe

Zombi 2's incredible success in Europe re-ignited Fulci's sagging career and reinvented the director as a horror maven. Fulci would go on to direct several more horror films, and Zombi 2 introduced several of his trademarks: zombies, hyper-realistic gore and blood, and the infamous "eyeball gag" (a character is impaled or otherwise stabbed through the eyeball). Although Fulci's detractors labeled the film as a cheap attempt to cash in on the success of Dawn of the Dead, it is interesting to note that the Zombi 2 screenplay was actually completed before Dawn of the Dead premiered (hence the lack of connection between the two films).


Despite the massive popularity of the film, Zombi 2 was banned in several countries due to the massive gore content, including Great Britain. It was released by Vipco but with a lot of violence edited out. It was finally released uncut in 2005. Lead actor Ian McCulloch, who is British, never actually had the opportunity to watch the film until he recorded a commentary for a DVD release of Zombi 2 some twenty-two years later, and was shocked at the gore level. VIPCO (Video Instant Picture Company) is a UK based home video distribution company that specializes in releasing obscure and cult horror films. ... 2005 (MMV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


Zombi 2's massive European box office take also paved the way for three more sequels, which, like their predecessor, have no relation to any of the other films in the series — they all have self-contained plots. While the Zombi series proved to be incredibly lucrative, Zombi 2 is by far the most recognizable of the European zombie films.


Zombi 2 in the United States

Zombi 2 was released merely as Zombie in America and was considered a stand-alone film with no connection to Romero's zombie canon. The theatrical trailers for Zombie provided the memorable tagline of "We Are Going to Eat You!" and showcased some of the make-up effects, but did nothing to indicate the plot of the picture (although the audience was indeed warned about the graphic content of the film: a humorous crawl at the end of the preview promises "barf bags" to whoever requested them upon viewing the film). Although the film was released unrated, persons under the age of seventeen were not permitted to attend viewings of the picture, even with a parent. The Living Dead is the blanket term for the three separate series that originated with the seminal 1968 zombie movie Night of the Living Dead created by George A. Romero and John A. Russo. ...


VHS/DVD release history

The film developed a massive cult following after its release on home video, although a series of public domain releases featured a muddy full screen transfer of the film that angered hardcore fans. In the late 1990s, the film was released on DVD and laserdisc by Anchor Bay and The Roan Group respectively. Both versions used a widescreen print, to the delight of fans. But more complaints were made about the transfer, which was still dark and muddy à la the film's original VHS release. The DVD/Laserdisc version also omitted several minutes of nudity from the film while leaving the film's graphic violence intact. Cult film is a colloquial term for a film that has accrued a highly devoted group of fans. ... The process of creating a full screen anamorphic image, also known as a full height anamorphic image, involves taking a 16x9, or 1. ... Anchor Bay Entertainment: the home video/television distribution company. ...


Five years later, Blue Underground and Shriek Show Films struck a deal to release the film on DVD yet again, this time with a newly remastered, uncut version of the film. Now truly complete and no longer muddy looking, the two DVDs were released with Shriek Show using the film's original name Zombi 2 while Blue Underground released the film under the Americanized Zombie name. The Shriek Show release also contained a second disc filled with bonus material, which made their release slightly more desirable as opposed to the less expensive bare-boned Blue Underground release.


Also worth noting are the differences between the 2004 Shriek Show Media Blasters release and the 2006 Shriek Show Anchor Bay release, which often get confused. While Anchor Bay has a history of showing a great deal of respect for the preservation of purity in original director approved and uncut film releases, the 2006 Anchor Bay release of 'Zombi 2' inexplicably has a few minutes of footage omitted which can be found still intact in the 2004 Media Blasters release. Both feature comparable digitally remastered, anamorphic widescreen transfers, as well as the same bonus materials, but only the 2004 Media Blasters release can truly be considered "uncut".


The other films in the Zombi series made it to America as video releases--none were released theatrically in the States.


Trivia

  • The Canadian band Fake Shark - Real Zombie! took their name as a reference from a scene in this movie.
  • The band Send More Paramedics have a song called Zombie vs Shark in homage to this movie.
  • Hip-hop producer Necro sampled the theme in the song "Carnivores" on the 2005 self-titled album from his group Circle of Tyrants
  • The film was written before Dawn of the Dead was released in Italy, as an action/adventure thriller with no link to George A. Romero's films. The opening and closing scenes (which take place in New York) were added to the script later when the producers wanted to cash-in on the success of Dawn.
  • The make-up effects were done by renowned Italian Giannetto De Rossi. The make-up for the zombies was "caked" on in several stages and Lucio Fulci, the director, constantly referred to the extras as "walking flower pots".
  • The newspaper office scene was filmed in a busy office building, and at one point the cast and crew inadvertently interrupted a meeting held by Rupert Murdoch, who angrily kicked them out.
  • Several of the actors playing the zombies were actually brothers. They look so similar that some people have speculated that all the zombies were played by one man.
  • As shown in trailers before the film was released, airline "barf bags" were handed out to theater moviegoers due to the unusually high amount of violence and gore for a horror film of that time.
  • Enzo G. Castellari was asked to direct this film early in its development, but turned it down.

Fake Shark - Real Zombie! are a band whose members hail from Langley, British Columbia and also Portland, Oregon, and combine the styles of IDM, Hardcore and Latin Music to create a sound not familiar to their Canadian and American fans. ... Send More Paramedics are a crossover thrash band from Leeds in the north of England. ... Ron Braunstein (born 1976) known better by his stage name, Necro, is an indie death rap, hardcore hip hop rapper from Brooklyn, New York known in the hip hop community for his exceptionally explicit lyrics. ... Dawn of the Dead, is a prominent 1978 zombie horror film which contributed to the rise of the so-called splatter craze in horror films. ... Lucio Fulci (born June 17, 1927 in Rome, Italy - died March 13, 1996 in Rome, Italy (diabetes-related illness)) was an Italian film director, screenwriter and actor. ... Enzo G. Castellari (July 29, 1938 in Rome, as Enzo Girolami) is an Italian film director. ...

Goofs

  • After the four heroes escape from the cottage, the camera cuts to a closeup of the jeep window. Reflected in the window is the arm of a crewmember, and when the camera pulls away you can see the head of a crewmember wearing a hat.
  • When Dr. Menard is driving and discussing the zombie plague with the visitors, the "clean" part of the jeep's windshield (i.e. the path of the windshield wipers) appears to be cut out of the glass (probably to provide a better view of the actors and prevent the camera being reflected on the glass).
  • In the last scene, the radio announcer in New York City states that the governor has declared a state of national emergency. Only the President can declare a national emergency, not a governor of a state.
  • During the underwater scene where the zombie is fighting with the shark, the zombie's arm is bitten off by the shark. However, we see him with the arm after he loses it, and without the arm before it is bitten off.
  • In the end scenes in the church, our heroes can be seen throwing bottles of kerosene at the zombies. The first one explodes into flames on the floor, but the following three bottles are all thrown into space where there is no fire. The fire has vanished.
  • Paola Menard is in the village cottage alone, when the zombies begin to threaten her safety and attack. She then pulls the large wooden cabinet from the wall and pushes it against the door. However she pushes the dresser up against the door twice between shots.
  • When Brian fires a rifle at the shark from the boat, he fires the rifle multiple times very quickly. The rifle he is using is a bolt action rifle, which must have a bolt part moved before each fire. He does not touch the bolt.
  • In the last shot of the film, the zombies are walking across the bridge to New York City. Below, there are cars on both sides of the bridge driving to and from the island with absolutely no concern for the chaos that is supposedly taking place. I guess the filmmakers couldn't stop traffic for a few minutes to get the shot?
  • After Brian has killed the zombie that has killed he has a small drop of blood on the right armpit of his shirt. When he arrives at the hospital, his shirt has been doused with blood. After dispatching the first zombie, his shirt has a lot less blood splatter on it.
  • When the yacht is seen from the harbor patrol boat at a distance, it is stern on to the yacht. However, when the yacht is viewed through binoculars by one of the boats crew, it is side on.
  • The New York harbor patrol boat flies a French tricolor.

See also

The Living Dead films
Official Romero directed films
Night of the Living Dead • Dawn of the Dead • Day of the Dead • Land of the Dead • Diary of the Dead
Unofficial sequel/spin-offs
Italian Zombi series: Zombi 2 • Zombi 3 • Zombi 4 (aka Oltre la Morte or After Death)
Other: Day of the Dead 2: Contagium • Children of the Living Dead
Remakes
Night of the Living Dead (1990) • Dawn of the Dead (2004) • Night of the Living Dead 3-D • Day of the Dead (2007)
Return of the Living Dead series
The Return of the Living Dead • Return of the Living Dead Part II • Return of the Living Dead 3 • Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis • Return of the Living Dead: Rave from the Grave
Notable spoofs/parodies
Night of the Living Bread • Shaun of the Dead

The Zombi series is a series of Italian zombie horror movies. ... The Living Dead is the blanket term for the three separate series that originated with the seminal 1968 zombie movie Night of the Living Dead created by George A. Romero and John A. Russo. ... George Romero at the 2006 DragonCon George Andrew Romero (born February 4, 1940) is an American director, writer, editor and actor. ... Night of the Living Dead is a 1968 black-and-white independent horror film directed by George A. Romero. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Day of the Dead (1985) is a horror film by director George A. Romero, and the third of four movies beginning with Night of the Living Dead, continued in Dawn of the Dead and completed in Land of the Dead. ... This article or section contains a plot summary that may be overly long, confusing, or ambiguous. ... Diary of the Dead (1976 film). ... The Living Dead is the blanket term for the three separate series that originated with the seminal 1968 zombie movie Night of the Living Dead created by George A. Romero and John A. Russo. ... The Zombi series is a series of Italian zombie horror movies. ... Zombi 3 (known as Zombie Flesh Eaters 2 in the UK) is the in-name-only 1988 followup to Zombi 2, itself an unofficial sequel to 1979s Dawn of the Dead (released in Italy as Zombi). ... This article refers to the film, After Death. ... Children of the Living Dead is a 2001 film, a sequel to Night of the Living Dead: 30th Anniversary Edition, which was a special edition of Night of the Living Dead with added scenes and a new score. ... The Living Dead is the blanket term for the three separate series that originated with the seminal 1968 zombie movie Night of the Living Dead created by George A. Romero and John A. Russo. ... Night of the Living Dead is the 1990 remake of George A. Romeros 1968 classic, Night of the Living Dead, and was directed by Tom Savini. ... Dawn of the Dead is a loose, reimagined remake of George A. Romeros 1978 film. ... Night of the Living Dead 3-D is a 2006 horror film made in 3-D. It is a remake of the 1968 horror classic Night of the Living Dead. ... Day of the Dead will be a remake of George A. Romeros classic zombie film of the same name. ... Return of the Living Dead is a series of films that was produced between 1985-2005. ... Return of the Living Dead is a series of films that was produced between 1985-93. ... see Return of the Living Dead ... Return of the Living Dead III is an American horror film released in 1993. ... Night of the Living Bread (1990) is a short film parody of Night of the Living Dead, directed by Kevin S. OBrien. ... Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Shaun of the Dead Shaun of the Dead is a 2004 British zombie-themed romantic comedy, or rom zom com as it dubs itself, released in April 9, 2004 in the United Kingdom and September 24, 2004 in the United States. ...

External links

So many versions...this helps http://www.dvdcompare.net/comparisons/film.php?fid=1 The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) is an online database of information about motion pictures, actors, movie stars, TV shows, TV stars, production crew personnel, as well as video games. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Zombi 2 (863 words)
It's important to bear in mind that Gli Ultimi Zombi was actually among the first zombies: the dozens of zombie films which followed Zombi 2 mainly drew their inspiration from Fulci's film, not directly from Dawn of the Dead...
Zombi 2 (pardon the expression) grossed more at European box offices than Dawn, probably because it was simpler and more spectacular, and also probably because the Fulci/Briganti/de Rossi idea of the zombie is less recognizably human.
From Zombi 2 on, the zombie would lose the pathos it had inspired as a former human being, in movies as early as White Zombie (1932) through Val Lewton's I Walked with a Zombie (1943) and even in Romero's Night/Dawn/Day trilogy.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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