Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Zombieland: Double Tap Movie Review : A taut and hilarious sequel

Zombieland: Double Tap Review: It’s been a decade since Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson), Wichita (Emma Stone), Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg), and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin) met. They’ve had enough time to hone their zombie hunting and killing skills over the years and are now pretty good at it. Not only have they identified different types of zombies, and how to work as a team, they even see themselves as a family. But, familiarity breeds contempt, and after spending so much time with each other, they begin to realise they’re not as close-knit. This causes problems as the four make their way across a zombie-infected United States in search of a place to call home.

Not many sequels can justify their existence, let alone be good. ‘Zombieland: Double Tap’ eliminates any signs of sequel fatigue by taking what made the first film work, building on it, and throwing some curveballs along the way. Previously, one of the most fun aspects was the chemistry between the four lead actors, and there’s no shortage of it this time around either. Harrelson, Stone, Eisenberg and Breslin pick up right where they left off without missing a step. They work incredibly well with each other, but the one who stands out is the trigger-happy Tallahassee played with calculated abandon by Woody Harrelson. Rarely does a politically incorrect character end up being hilariously endearing; Harrelson knows precisely where to go overboard and exactly when to reel it in. The new cast additions are slightly hit-or-miss – Rosario Dawson as Nevada is the female version of Tallahassee, but Dawson manages to fit right in. Zoey Deutch plays it up as the stereotypical dumb blonde Madison and may end up being a new favourite. Avan Jogia doesn’t find the same success as the formulaic hippie Berkeley.

The film dishes out ample irreverent humour along with buckets of gratuitous zombie violence. Both combine to deliver regular laugh-out-loud moments, along with thoroughly entertaining and creative action set-pieces. That shouldn’t come as a surprise from Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, the writers of ‘Deadpool’ and its sequel. Along with co-writer David Callaham and director Ruben Fleischer, this team manages to get the best out of a great cast to make ‘Zombieland: Double Tap’ a taut and hilarious horror comedy while infusing new blood (and brains) into the zombie genre. Bring on the third one!

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