Zombie Isle In the late 70's, a group of college students and their professor ventured onto an uninhabited island for a day of exploring flora, fauna and co-ed fun. The class field trip quic... Read allZombie Isle In the late 70's, a group of college students and their professor ventured onto an uninhabited island for a day of exploring flora, fauna and co-ed fun. The class field trip quickly becomes a grisly nightmare as the students and faculty soon discover they are stranded... Read allZombie Isle In the late 70's, a group of college students and their professor ventured onto an uninhabited island for a day of exploring flora, fauna and co-ed fun. The class field trip quickly becomes a grisly nightmare as the students and faculty soon discover they are stranded and the island is crawling with ravenous, flesh-eating ghouls, reanimated as Zombies by a... Read all
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The story takes on a pretty basic concept- people enter unknown territory and come face-to-face with the reanimated dead. There is some depth added by the addition of a mad scientist from the Nazi regime that causes the horror in order to harness the power over life and death in the name of the Nazi party. The characters, although two dimensional, seem grounded with some realism, a bit of satire which make it easy to connect with them. The acting is a bit cheesy, but it is intentional. This is an homage to the low budget, poorly acted and much loved cult films of the past. "Zombie Isle" is every bit that and Robert Elkins does a d@mn good job at creating it both in story and visual effects.
The special effects used in "Zombie Isle" are stripped-down practical ones that at times manage to capture the same classic aspects of films like "Zombi", "Dawn Of The Mummy" and "Zombie Island Massacre". The zombies are simple, effective creatures that really sell the film's overall intention to create a gory film on a low budget. There are moments when the effects are flubbed, mostly by showing the practical effect technique or aspect to clearly, giving away the illusion, but for the most part things work. The color effect and 70's retro effect can be a bit distracting, but the sound effects dissolve any annoyance and really set things right- both atmospherically and suspenseful.
Overall I really enjoyed "Zombie Isle". At first I just knew I was not going to like this film, that the vision and ability for Elkins to execute it would not mesh. I was pleasantly surprised. What really makes this film enjoyable is the zombie make-up style and creative use of simple practical effects. Plus Elkins doesn't weigh the film down with a bunch of back story or added dialog. Everything is stripped down, and for the most part effective. There is some moments with the scientist that feels contrived and the ability to control mindless zombies without voodoo is questionable, but for the most part "Zombie Isle" gives us a a fun, entertaining, film.
This movie is written and directed by Robert Elkins (Psychopath) and stars Jerry E. Long (King of Baltimore), David S. Witt (A Zombie Croc: Evil Has Been Summoned), Kyle Billeter (Alien Swamp Beast), Dewey Collins (Shanidar) and Apryl Crowell (Music Store Massacre).
This is one of those movies that tries too hard to look like a 70s grindhouse picture with how it's filmed. The acting, dialogue and circumstances are purposely cheesy and not great. However, the horror elements are actually surprisingly good. The zombies, their makeup and look was entertaining. The gore really carries this movie. Every scene where a zombie is eating a corpse is a 10/10. However, I don't know how they found a way to make this movie two hours long.
Overall, this movie is really bad...with some great horror scenes. I would score this movie a 3/10 but would recommend it to horror enthusiasts who can't find anything to watch and hasn't seen it yet.
A Robert Elkins flick.
from WWMM & American Eyesore.
So,This is a really well made tribute,We shall call it to all those '70s drive inn movies.
The girls are cute and embrace multiple stereotypes we always like to see in our ' Comfort Food' movies – The smart one,the dumb one,the blond one,the scared one and the 'McGiver' one that uses a PENCIL to defeat hordes,Yes hordes of zombies that move Very Fast ! The boys are also represented by a couple stereo-types we have expected,The smart one,the flirt and then their is the TONY JONES turn,A professor ( No,not like Indiana Jones or even the one from Gilligan's Island finally a Island reference).
This professor carries a flask ,halliburton briefcase with what must be important things and a pipe and any way He is a bad man.( period) We left out some cool nods to 'Shock Waves' and Paul Blaisdell tribute,That was so awesome.
I can't claim to have heard about the movie, much less know what it was about or who was in it. I stumbled upon it, saw the title on the movie's cover and picked it up, brought it home to watch.
I managed to get maybe 30 minutes into the movie then I gave up. Wow, this was a lousy low budget movie. Now, low budget movies doesn't necessarily mean that a movie is bad. But "Zombie Isle" was lacking a proper storyline, a proper script, and it most definitely was lacking interesting characters. And for a zombie movie, then the zombies in "Zombie Isle" were laughable at best.
The acting in the movie was questionable and dubious, and it was one of the biggest reasons for why I gave up on watching the movie.
The special effects in the movie were fairly okay, not top of the line or impressive, but they served their purposes well enough.
And the movie was shot in a way to make it appear like it was a 1970s movie, with grit and age to the reel. The idea was good enough and interesting enough, I suppose, but in reality it turned out to be more annoying that serving to lift up the movie.
My rating of "Zombie Isle" lands on a mere two out of ten stars. And there is no chance of me returning to watch the rest of the movie.
A hyper low budget independent zombie movie, Zombie Isle is filmed in a grindhouse manner though likely just to disguise the lack of funds and how bad everything looks.
It tells the story of a tutor and his students who go to an island on a field trip only to fall foul of the undead. Pretty standard stuff, just really really really bad.
From the amateurish grindhouse effects to the terrible editing (Both video and sound) all the way to the dreadful cast and zombies this is a prime example of why independent filmmakers choose the zombie sub genre. Zombie films are popular and very cheap and cheerful to make, however creating an original enjoyable feature? That's where most struggle and Mr Elkins is certainly no exception.
Absolute bottom of the barrel zombie movie.
The Good:
Interesting creature effects
The Bad:
Grindhouse effects are just awful
Dreadful editing
Some of the camera work is so bad it defies belief
Ridiculous wigs and faux facial hair
Needlessly long
Things I Learnt From This Movie:
Islands are land masses
Birds need to land to poop
The faces of zombies are a breeding ground for gummie worms
Did you know
- TriviaAppeared in the achievement hunter show "theater mode", episode 6.
- GoofsWhen the girl removes the "Lucky pencil" from the zombies head the entire prosthetic wound comes off with it.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Theater Mode: Zombie Isle (2016)