IMDb RATING
6.4/10
11K
YOUR RATING
A group of slackers face an army of zombies. The Cuban government and media claim the living dead are dissidents revolting against the government.A group of slackers face an army of zombies. The Cuban government and media claim the living dead are dissidents revolting against the government.A group of slackers face an army of zombies. The Cuban government and media claim the living dead are dissidents revolting against the government.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 5 nominations total
Juan Miguel Más
- Mario
- (as Juan Miguel Mas)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe testicle scene between Lázaro and his son is not a "natural occurrence". Lázaro's bits are made from plastic.
- Crazy creditsWe see Juan fighting zombies on the dock, except that it's animated to look like a graphic novel.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Midnight Movie Review: The Night of Terror 2012 (2012)
- SoundtracksMy Way
(Comme d'Habitude)
Music by Claude François and Jacques Revaux
French lyrics by Gilles Thibaut
English lyrics by Paul Anka
Copyright by Warner Chappell Music France / Jean Musique
© 1968 Warner Chappell Music France, Jeune Musique Edition Sarl.
Bajo licencia de Sony/ATV Music Publishing (Spain) LLC S. en C.
Performed by Sid Vicious
(P) 1978 The copyright in this sound recording is owned by The Sex Pistols Residuals under exclusive license to Virgin Records Ltd
Featured review
It is rare that a film combines, satire, parody, thrills, scary zombies, and deadpan humor. Such is the film Juan of the Dead.
Plot is simple. Zombies try to take over Cuba. But the government says they are "dissidents" created by the Americans to undermine Cuba. In a very clever film, the director, Alejandro Bruques, takes us on a fantasy ride of zombie threats and humor with many political points along the way.
Several island residents form a motley crew of a trans gurl, a muscle bound dude, a hot babe and a guy named "California", is just the beginning of zombie mayhem.
They even open a business, "we kill your loved one" to earn a few extra bucks off the zombies...Cuban style.
The budget is not mentioned in the film overview, but I bet they really made a very low budge stretch quite a bit. From the beginning to end credits it is a delight. Every film student should see this movie to see what you can do with imagination and not the fancy cameras profiled in American media.
Their first kill has a harpoon go through a zombie to kill an old lady standing right behind the zombie. Ooops! A wooden oar weapon is so decrepit that we would never use it as an oar.
There is also the famous car/boat that many refuges use to flee Cuba used to escape the onslaught of zombies. In one scene, an attack by numerous zombies is thwarted by a single harpoon and a "rally around the flag pole". Heh, heh.
A slow motion arrow is an tick toward Matrix.
The film introduces a stereo type American and since the crew does not speak English, Juan introduces himself by saying "My name is Juan". Get it. It beginning Spanish class the first thing you learn is "Yo me llamo Juan". Very funny.
They spoof Bruce Lee with a freeze frame at the end. Ending credits are terrific. There are subtitles so get ready and just read them.
The ending credits are really inventive as is the entire film. I have never seen it in a bargain bin, so I will try and make my own copy from a TV showing. I recommend this highly as a very funny, highly inventive, well shot film about the zombie Apocalypse.
Plot is simple. Zombies try to take over Cuba. But the government says they are "dissidents" created by the Americans to undermine Cuba. In a very clever film, the director, Alejandro Bruques, takes us on a fantasy ride of zombie threats and humor with many political points along the way.
Several island residents form a motley crew of a trans gurl, a muscle bound dude, a hot babe and a guy named "California", is just the beginning of zombie mayhem.
They even open a business, "we kill your loved one" to earn a few extra bucks off the zombies...Cuban style.
The budget is not mentioned in the film overview, but I bet they really made a very low budge stretch quite a bit. From the beginning to end credits it is a delight. Every film student should see this movie to see what you can do with imagination and not the fancy cameras profiled in American media.
Their first kill has a harpoon go through a zombie to kill an old lady standing right behind the zombie. Ooops! A wooden oar weapon is so decrepit that we would never use it as an oar.
There is also the famous car/boat that many refuges use to flee Cuba used to escape the onslaught of zombies. In one scene, an attack by numerous zombies is thwarted by a single harpoon and a "rally around the flag pole". Heh, heh.
A slow motion arrow is an tick toward Matrix.
The film introduces a stereo type American and since the crew does not speak English, Juan introduces himself by saying "My name is Juan". Get it. It beginning Spanish class the first thing you learn is "Yo me llamo Juan". Very funny.
They spoof Bruce Lee with a freeze frame at the end. Ending credits are terrific. There are subtitles so get ready and just read them.
The ending credits are really inventive as is the entire film. I have never seen it in a bargain bin, so I will try and make my own copy from a TV showing. I recommend this highly as a very funny, highly inventive, well shot film about the zombie Apocalypse.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Thợ Săn Xác Sống
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $18,000
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $12,000
- Mar 18, 2012
- Gross worldwide
- $324,834
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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