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IMDb > Exhumed (2003) (V)

Exhumed (2003) (V) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
4.2/10   129 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
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Director:
Brian Clement
Writer:
Brian Clement (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for Exhumed on IMDbPro.
Genre:
Action | Horror | Sci-Fi more
Tagline:
An epic anthology of the undead
Plot:
Three stories across the centuries of individuals given the power to raise the dead, set in feudal Japan, 1940s USA, and a post-apocalyptic future. full summary | add synopsis
User Comments:
If it were two films and we left the material in the middle on the cutting room floor it would be good more

Cast

  (in credits order)
Masahiro Oyake ... Ryuzo
Hiroaki Itaya ... Zentaro

Bettina May ... Jane Decarlo (as Claire Westby)
Moira Thomas ... Vivian Von Prowe
Chelsey Arentsen ... Cherry
Chantelle Adamache ... Zura
Chuck Depape ... General Deus
Denys Melanson ... Detective Frank Sterner
Rob Nesbitt ... Dr. Farell
Scott Bisgrove ... Mr. Grey
Kitten Coquette ... Herself
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Morgan Alexander ... Doorman
Craig Allen ... Burlesque Patron
Scott Beaty ... Chemical Suit Trooper / Sailor
Spencer Blochlinger ... Chemical Suit Trooper
Mikel Boeur ... Chemical Suit Trooper
Stephan Bourke ... Johnny
Denise Brown ... Corpse of the Russian Ambassador
Wendy Clarke ... Burlesque Patron
Josh Clarkson ... Undead
Brian Clement ... Crying Fan
Chris Cowley ... Merrick
Jeremy Deighton ... Werewolf Rocker
Mark Hubber ... Vampire Mod
Andrea Hume ... Six-Gun Annie
Ira Hunter ... Beat Cop / Drunk Bar Patron / Undead
Bryn Johnson ... Undead
Rei Kido ... Zentaro's Brother
Gerry Kramer ... Gerald Norman
Sarah Kramer ... Lorna Bainbrook
Dave Krawchuck ... Officer / Chemical Suit Trooper / Undead (as Dave Krawchuk)
Brad Kurushima ... Vampire Mod / Undead
Aaron Lachapelle ... Chemical Suit Trooper
Bin Ling ... Chemical Suit Trooper / Undead / Officer
Steve Migliarese ... Undead
Stuart Palfrey ... Burlesque Host
Josh Pasnak ... Chemical Suit Trooper
Cam Pipes ... Drunken Sailor
Dustan Roberts ... Chemical Suit Trooper / El Diablo Azul
Mike Selman ... Undead
Gina Sharma ... Servant Girl
Hailey Shiels ... Ticket Girl
Jay Stewart ... Undead
Robin Thompson ... Doctor
Chris Tihor ... Jonesy
Troy Tompkins ... Chemical Suit Trooper / Undead
Pati Tozer ... Burlesque Patron
Theodore Trout ... Kane
Martin Wales ... Kabalan
Jay Walls ... Undead
Yuichiro Yoshibe ... Undead
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Directed by
Brian Clement 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Brian Clement  writer

Produced by
Stephen R. Hicks .... executive producer
Bettina May .... executive producer (as Claire Westby)
 
Original Music by
Justin Hagberg 
 
Cinematography by
Brian Clement 
 
Film Editing by
Brian Clement 
 
Costume Design by
Bettina May  (as Claire Westby)
 
Makeup Department
Jason Ward .... special makeup effects artist
 
Stunts
Bin Ling .... stunt double
 
Camera and Electrical Department
James Bouley .... grip
Becky Julseth .... second camera operator
 
Other crew
Scott Beaty .... production assistant
Keith King .... weapons supplier
Dustan Roberts .... production assistant
 
Thanks
Stephan Bourke .... special thanks
Sue Chenier .... special thanks
Wendy Clarke .... special thanks
Michael Gingold .... special thanks
Andrea Hume .... special thanks
Liam Lux .... special thanks
Rob Nesbitt .... special thanks
Jay Walls .... special thanks
 

Production CompaniesDistributorsOther Companies
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Additional Details

Runtime:
87 min
Country:
Canada
Language:
English | Japanese
Certification:
USA:Unrated | UK:18

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
As originally scripted, the movie has the "Last Rumble" segment in the middle, and the movie ends with the full "Shadow of Tomorrow" sequence, but during editing these were switched. more
Movie Connections:
References Evil Dead II (1987) more

FAQ

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6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful:-
If it were two films and we left the material in the middle on the cutting room floor it would be good, 25 February 2005
6/10
Author: Brandt Sponseller from New York City

Exhumed is constructed as if it were three shorts. The Forest of Death is set in "feudal Japan". Shadow of Tomorrow is supposed to be a 1940s-era film noir. And the third, Last Rumble, is an everything-but-the-kitchen-sink genre-film appropriation set somewhere between the early 1970s and 2003. The focuses of The Forest of Death and Last Rumble are traditional horror monsters—zombies, vampires and werewolves, although zombies make an appearance in all three segments. (And yes, despite claims from writer/director Brian Clement to the contrary, they are zombies.) Clement also attempts an overarching thread that has something to do with wars/armies of the undead, time travel, Nazi-like villains, and so on.

The premise is slightly incohesive and incoherent. Clement has set an overly ambitious task for himself with Exhumed--in his words, to create a "(postmodernist) critique of postmodernism" combined with an homage ("ripping off" as he calls it) to various kinds of genre films. Despite two good segments, the whole doesn't quite make it.

That's a shame, because both The Forest of Death and Last Rumble rise above--sometimes far above--their super-low-budget limitations. The problem is that Shadow of Tomorrow is awful, and the attempt at an overarching sci-fi horror story never rises above being gobbledy-gook. It's so nonsensical (in a bad way) that it begins to make Donnie Darko (2001) look like the masterpiece that it's not. Clement should have instead made two films--feature length versions of segments 1 and 3, and tossed the Shadow of Tomorrow stuff into the garbage. Then he would have had two 8s instead of one 6, which is equivalent to the letter grade of "D".

Let's talk about what's wrong with Shadow of Tomorrow first, since it's basically what ruins the film. In the director's commentary, which is shared with producer/actor/costume-designer Claire Westby, Westby notes a criticism she encountered about this segment. The critic complained that they were "trying" to make it just like a film noir. Westby countered with, "That's the point!" I think she may be misreading the word "trying". Trying doesn't necessarily mean succeeding.

Many if not most film noirs were quality films, with fine performances, interesting stories, intriguing scripts, great cinematography, lighting, editing, and so on. Sure there were a lot of unusual film noir actors, with quirky dispositions and deliveries--like Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, and James Cagney, but they weren't bad actors--far from it. The film noir segment of Exhumed is loaded with bad acting, a pointless story, banal dialogue, overdone lighting and bad editing.

Clement apparently instructed the cast to be "over-the-top", but over-the-top doesn't mean "deliver this generic and clichéd dialogue in the most stilted, amateurish way you can". If that's what film noir is to Clement and Westby, they're insulting film noir. To make matters worse, Clement and Westby spend a lot of this segment's commentary talking about trying to get period elements just right. Look, I don't care if a skirt hemline is the "right length" or if the radio is of the era and shown subtly or not. Work on creating a good story and dialogue while capturing quality performances. For all the putative period concern, the lighting in the segment, although interesting, is far too harsh to mimic a film noir. The contrasts were not that stark, or at least didn't appear so on film. Perhaps adaptations needed to be made for digital video. Also, despite the very brief Night of the Living Dead (1969)-like opening and the bad Dr. Frankenstein stuff in the end, this segment is not horror or sci-fi, and doesn't fit the tenor of the rest of the film. It doesn't help when the film noir stuff reappears at the end, either.

The problems with Exhumed's film noir are all the more curious in light of the two good segments. The Forest of Death genuinely captures the feel of a late 1960s/early-1970s kung fu horror film. It has a very interesting story and dialogue, pretty good acting, directing and editing, great martial arts work and fantastic special effects. Even though the story is a bit thin for a 90-minute film, it could have easily been expanded without adding much in the way of plot to make a fine film in the tradition of Master of the Flying Guillotine (1975), which has an even thinner plot but is still a masterpiece.

The Last Rumble segment may be even better. It's a bizarre concatenation of everything from Quadrophenia (1979) to Psychomania (1971), The Crazies (1973), Underworld (2003), Evil Dead II (1987), 12 Monkeys (1995), Hellboy (2004), Zombi Holocaust (1980), "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" (1997), "Angel" (1999), Frankenstein (1931) and even the Santo films (beginning with Santo vs. The Infernal Men in 1958). We get motorcycle –riding vampire and Fu-Manchu-eyebrowed werewolf gangs in a crazy, surrealistic plot that includes a great vampire and werewolf lesbian scene and lots of well done graphic carnage. The gobbledy-gook almost works in this section, as its consistent with the bizarre tenor of the rest of the material--Psychomania is probably the best comparison for this. Only in this section did Clement achieve a successful wide-ranging genre film pastiche. In Last Rumble, "over-the-top" really is over-the-top, and the result is something that almost spoofs its sources while still respecting them. The sole limitations here are budget-oriented.

Exhumed is not really a critique of postmodernism, and isn't really postmodernist. Postmodernism isn't a cannibalization of self. It's not an exhumation of material. Clement is mistaking postmodernism's particular kinds of self-reference for (necrophilic?) cannibalism. Those are two different ideas, and even self-reference isn't sufficient (or necessary, for that matter) for postmodernism. To be postmodernist, self-reference would have to be in service of pulling the rug out from "truth", or in the case of films, breaking levels of removal--various fictional levels versus reality, theatrical conceits in films, and so on. Instead, Exhumed is more like honest and occasionally sophisticated low-budget hackwork. Sometimes it's successful, but overall it has problems.

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