Melbourne 2003
Undead
directed by Peter and Michael Spierig
International Critics' Prize
New Life for the Zombie Film
by Mike Walsh
The
jury at the 2003 Melbourne International Film Festival awarded the FIPRESCI
Prize to Undead, a low budget zombie film, made by two brothers from Brisbane,
Peter and Michael Spierig. The award citation praised the film “for
daring to be everything that Australian films are not supposed to be:
part of a popular, disreputable genre.” The jury also commended
the film “as an entertainment that is also political, while showing
the pleasures of hands-on filmmaking.”
The film is set in the small town of Berkeley, which suddenly
finds itself the target of fireballs which plummet to earth and produce
the usual effects that one associates with zombie invasion—a lurching,
slack-jawed populace with a predilection for the consumption of human
brains. Inevitably, a small group of survivors steels itself for battle,
not only against zombies but also a mysterious alien presence which is
also at work.
The FIPRESCI citation emphasized the way in which the film
sails into the prevailing winds of its local film industry. Because they
tend to be government subsidized as well as conscious of the imperative
not to take on Hollywood on the terrain of popular genre filmmaking, Australian
films are more likely to be middlebrow cinema-of-quality productions which
wear their theatrical bases on their sleeves. Dialogue and capital A Acting
are stressed over any robust connection to screen culture or history which
might produce works which are either formally challenging or disreputably
popular.
Other Australian features shown in Melbourne (Sue Brooks’
Japanese Story, Tony McNamara’s The Rage in Placid Lake, and Kathryn
Millard’s Travelling Light) provided ample evidence of the aridness
of this government-supported filmmaking.
The Spierig brothers seem determined to turn this situation
around. Their modestly-budgeted film ($US600,000) was financed out of
their work directing television commercials in their home state of Queensland
in Australia’s north-east. The film enjoyed no government support,
because what government agency would encourage a zombie movie?
More’s the pity. The horror genre is one of the most
vigorous international forms at the moment, and the zombie sub-genre offers
rich ground for strong social and political metaphor. Given the Australian
government’s recent policy of mandatory detention of refugees in
outback prison camps, the film’s final image of a desert prison
full of zombies is a resonant one. The twist in the tail is that it is
the local citizens who keep on turning into zombies. While our heroes
spend most of their time struggling against aliens, they are finally forced
into a realization that they should re-think this policy. The sub-text
of the film is that one should remain open to outside forces for a renewal
of cultural life.
Of course, this is a rather high-minded way to read a film
that takes a lot of pleasure in blowing holes in people and chopping bits
off them. While they may know how to do this pretty stylishly in Hong
Kong, there is a good deal of freshness in seeing young filmmakers on
the fringes of another filmmaking tradition seeking to absorb the influences
of John Woo as well as George Romero, while bringing something distinctive
of their own to the mix.
Undead presents a new direction for Australian filmmakers,
or perhaps the renewal of an older direction marked out almost twenty-five
years ago when George Miller made Mad Max.
Mike Walsh
© FIPRESCI 2003
Mike Walsh is a critic for RealTime, a national Australian
arts newspaper. He also lectures in Screen Studies at Flinders University
in Adelaide.
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