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GeneChing
03-29-2012, 12:16 PM
I considered posting this on our Zombies! (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=50475) thread, but as it has 'a little martial arts action, parkour tumbles' I figured it would sit nicely on its own here.

Zombie 108 (http://www.screendaily.com/reviews/the-latest/zombie-108/5039940.article)
29 March, 2012 | By Mark Adams, chief film critic
Dir/scr: Joe Chien. China. 2012. 87mins
http://www.screendaily.com/attachments.aspx?js=yes&height=auto&width=724&storycode=5039940&attype=P&atcode=1150934
Billed as ‘the first genre movie combining apocalypse and zombie in Chinese film history’, the freewheelingly clumsy Zombie 108 may well deliver the expected blood and gore to keep horror fans happy, but it staggers and collapses when it comes to adding story or dialogue to this most over-exposed of horror genres.

What the promotional material fails to mention is that the film even gets a little bored with its traditional shambling zombies vs. humanity plot, and decides to spice up the action with a little martial arts action, parkour tumbles and even a torture-porn subplot. And all in under 90 minutes.

The zombie mayhem is nicely staged in sections – and has a few choice moments of humour, some of them inadvertent – though the whole torture porn sequences may well cause classification issues in some territories. The film has DVD release written all over it, and with a nice trailer and internet interest already out there it has a certain ready-made profile to fans of the genre. The film had a packed Filmart screening in Hong Kong and will no doubt find interested buyers and horror festivals.

A virus had leaked in Taipei and the government orders army and SWAT teams to oversee evacuation, but in Ximending, the downtown area of Taipei defined by dens of crime and sleaze the local gangs don’t take kindly to the police at their door. Initially they attack the SWAT teams, but when both gangsters and cop find themselves under attack by flesh-munching fiends there is an uneasy alliance as they try and escape.

Meanwhile Linda (model Yvonne Yao) tries to escape with her daughter and after being picked up by a car thinks her problems are over. In fact she has been picked up by a deformed pervert who locks up women in his basement for his sexual pleasures as well as torturing and deforming men. Action comes to a head when cops and gangsters end up at the weirdo’s apartment. Oh yes…there is also a serial killer who turns up there as well, just to complicate matters.

The film starts well enough with the zombies (of the slow-moving variety) enthusiastic in their munching techniques and the cop’n’crooks liberal in their gunfire. Sadly, though, after that the action is only adequately staged and the script pretty poor. The women all tend to favour short-shorts and crop tops (whether they be cops, dancers or passers-by) and the casual sexploitation is more than a little uncomfortable.

The ‘108’ of the title is never actually explained, though it may relate to the 108 defilements mentioned in Buddhist literature. Though equally it could simply be the amount of zombie bodies that one survivor uses in the best scene of the film to spell out the letters S-O-S to try and attract a passing helicopter.

International sales: Film Asia Entertainment Group, www.filmasiaent.com.hk

Producer: Morris Rong

Main cast: Yvonne Yao, Morris Rong, Tai Bo, Jack Kao, Dennis To, Ch Mu-yen

GeneChing
04-16-2012, 12:44 PM
Fri, Apr 13, 2012 - Page 15 News List
Movie review: Zombie 108 (棄城Z-108)
Clueless cops and gangsters, a sexual pervert and an abundance of naked women do battle with the undead in ‘Zombie 108,’ Taiwan’s first ever zombie flick
By Ho Yi / Staff Reporter
http://www.taipeitimes.com/images/2012/04/13/thumbs/p15-120413-a1.jpg
Many of the actors in Zombie 108 can’t act, but the zombies look decent enough.

Billed as the very first Taiwanese zombie movie, Zombie 108 (棄城Z-108) has generated lots of buzz among horror aficionados both at home and abroad. Nearly 900 people reportedly answered director Joe Chien’s (錢人豪) call to invest in the flick, whose budget clocked in at around NT$10 million. Later, two important players in the genre circuit, the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival and Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival, picked the movie as part of their lineups this year.

With a more than adequate beginning that recalls many blockbusters of its kind, the self-proclaimed horror B-movie gets off to a good start. Yet the momentum soon dissipates as the movie struggles to flesh out its story.

The film starts with a familiar premise. There is a virus breakout, which is suggested in a sketchy opening sequence. And the next thing we know, Ximending becomes a zombie-infected neighborhood under quarantine. A SWAT team moves in to contain the situation in the seedy downtown area run by local gangs whose obese boss, played by Morris Rong (戎祥), the film’s producer, spends his days surrounded by cocaine and naked women. After a gunfight, the cops and gangsters form an uneasy alliance as they try to survive the flesh-eating undead.

Meanwhile, young mother Linda (Yvonne Yao, 姚采穎) escapes the undead horde with her daughter but falls prey to a pervert, played by director Chien himself, who holds women as sex slaves in his basement.

Eventually, the survivors turn up at the pervert‘s apartment. A Japanese serial killer is thrown in for good measure.

To director Chien’s credit, the zombie assault scenes are well played out. There is also a good deal of gore and blood, though not quite as exciting as many horror fans would expect.

The action sequences are enlivened with parkour and martial arts moves by Taiwanese taekwondo athlete Chu Mu-yen (朱木炎) and martial artist-turned-actor Dennis To (杜宇航) from Hong Kong, both playing SWAT cops. The idea of incorporating extreme sports and kung fu into the fight against zombies has great potential. But the film doesn’t take advantage of this and instead confines itself to a poorly written script revolving around a bevy of mostly dull characters.

The role of women in the zombie action is mostly utilized for torture porn sequences, and the casualness of the sexploitation is hard to stomach.

After making several unsuccessful genre flicks, including Button Man (鈕扣人) and Gangster Rock (混混天團), director Chien seems to be heading in the right direction, into B-movie territory, but he will need to deploy a lot more ingenuity than he shows in Zombie 108 to become a notable filmmaker of trashy movies.

Zombie 108 (棄城Z-108)
Directed by: Joe Chien (錢人豪)
Starring: Yvonne Yao (姚采穎) as Linda, Morris Rong (戎祥) as gangster boss, Tai Pao (太保) as SWAT team leader, Joe Chien as pervert
Running time: 88 MINUTES
Language: Mandarin, English and Japanese with Chinese and English subtitles
Taiwan release: Today
You gotta admire a director who casts himself as 'pervert'.

TRAILER NSFW: 棄城 Z-108 正式修改版 預告 有新畫面 (高清 3D版) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vc0kJcmdEvI)