Working by his loner credo in life, a man finds his world turned upside down when a power plant accident nearby causes the residents of his hometown to turn into ravenous, flesh-eating zombies, forcing him to band together to get his family to safety away from the undead hordes and the raiders in the area.
Overall, this was a pretty solid indie-styled effort. The fact that this one tends to showcase a wild and reckless storyline that serves more to showcase a relentless series of gore-gags and encounters with the zombies gives this a lot to like. The bare minimum of a storyline here, about the plague running through the area following the plant accident and the madness that results here, is what's to be expected as the secondary subplots involving the military trying to control the area to find a cure or defending his family from the biker gang all come at the expense at more encounters with zombie and more low-budget gore. Though at times making this seemingly random and somewhat chaotic, that there's tons of action here as a result is a great deal more important as the action makes for a blindingly quick pace. As mentioned, this amount of action and confrontation with zombies here manages to provide this with a rather impressive amount of blood and gore. Filled with melting bodies, flesh bitten into and ripped off in strips, zombies playing with removed intestines and entrails, limbs getting removed or victims getting gnawed on until they're nothing but skeletons, the human victims here get brutalized quite extensively which is rather effective for how they're realized. As well, the decrepit and scarred zombies fare just as good with all the usual manners of dispatching them shown here where it effectively works as a special effects showpiece reel focusing on all the encounters here. Alongside the films' courage to continuously put children in danger and not making them untouchable, there's a lot to like in the film. There are a couple of minor factors present here. The main issue is the aforementioned plotless feel of the film, where it comes off as a random assortment of scenes vaguely resembling what would happen in a zombie apocalypse to get to the next gore-gag. That might not be a true detrimental issue for some but it does make the film seem aimless and rambling at points, focusing on a random assortment of people encountering the creatures in various points with no further ulterior purpose to them. As well, there are continuous reminders about the low-budget limitations on display that might deter some from this one, especially as the gore looks great yet the zombies themselves look pretty ridiculous and obviously cheap make-up. Otherwise, there's not much wrong here.
Rated Unrated/R: Extreme Graphic Violence, Graphic Language, Nudity and intense violence against children.