Four friends find themselves trapped in their small hometown after they discover their friends and neighbors going quickly and horrifically insane.
Timothy Olyphant
David
Radha Mitchell
Judy
Joe Anderson
Russell
Danielle Panabaker
Becca
Joe Reegan
Pvt. Billy Babcock
Glenn Morshower
Intelligence Officer
Gregory Sporleder
Travis Quinn
Lynn Lowry
Woman on Bike
Christie Lynn Smith
Deardra Farnum
Brett Rickaby
Bill Farnum
Preston Bailey
Nicholas Farnum
John Aylward
Mayor Hobbs
Larry Cedar
Ben Sandborn
Pierce Gagnon
Distraught Son
Mike Hickman
Rory Hamill
Lisa K. Wyatt
Peggy Hamill
Justin Welborn
Curt Hammil
Chet Grissom
Kevin Miller
Tahmus Rounds
Nathan
Brett Wagner
Jesse
Alex Van
Red
Tony Winters
Town Pastor
Frank Hoyt Taylor
Mortician Jim Finley
Justin Miles
Scotty McGregor
Marian Green
Mrs. McGregor
E. Roger Mitchell
Fire Chief Tom
Michael H. Cole
Site Coordinator
Chris Carnel
Car Wash Lunatic
Jimmy Waitman
Car Wash Lunatic
Jay Pearson
Car Wash Lunatic
Kathryn Kim
Distraught Mom
Adam Dingeman
Snickering Boy
Megan Hensley
Babbling Teen
Lori Beth Sikes
Distraught Mother
Mary Lynn Owen
Distraught Woman #2
Matt Lintz
Distraught Son #2
Wilbur Fitzgerald
Distraught Husband
Director
Breck Eisner
Original Film Writer
George A. Romero
Screenplay
Scott Kosar
Screenplay
Ray Wright
October 8, 2019
8
Boo-yah, indeed.
Directed by Breck Eisner and written by Scott Kosar & Ray Wright, The Crazies (2010) is a remake of the 1973 film directed by George A. Romero. It stars Timothy Olyphant, Rhada Mitchell and Joe Anderson. The plot sees a toxic spillage make its way into a small American town's water system and turns some of the locals into marauding maniacs.
Eisner's movie is that rare old thing these days, that of the horror remake that greatly improves upon the original. That might annoy some Romero purists, but the truth is, is that his original film really isn't that great to begin with. Thus it's ripe for a remake, whilst acknowledging that a certain weariness creeps into our thoughts at the seemingly never ending line of horror remakes getting churned out by a Hollywood running out of ideas. Hell I will even venture that we have seen all this before, nothing in this "Crazies" will have the horror faithful rushing out to tell their buddies about some overtly cranial splendour piece they have just watched, but this is a very effective horror piece, taut and tense at times, at others sick and splendidly disgusting. Eisner may not be a "Craven", or for sure no "Romero", but he executes the material with gusto and shows a knack for knowing how to make the material work.
The film is structured over three parts. Character formations in the little town of the delightfully small Americana sounding Ogden Marsh, which leads into the infected going doolally. Then it's the army attempting to get things under control. Lastly it's the the fall out as our brave survivors, erm, try to survive and make sense of what is happening. Eisner and his writers even get away with not fleshing out the principal characters. We know Olyphant's Sheriff is a toughie, and that his pregnant wife, Mitchell, is equally resourceful, while the deputy played by the film's standout performer, Joe Anderson, we know is loyal and sharp with a rifle. Who cares about flesh on these bones, let the crazies after them and see how they cope. Where the writers score plus points is with the portrait of a world losing its humanity. The sick are rounded up and contained, nobody cares enough to try and help them, while those sent to restore order, to protect the people, are as dangerous as those bleeding from the eyes and ears. There's madness everywhere.
With memorable blood pumping scenes, bona fide suspense and metaphorical smarts in the writing, this is one damn fine remake shocker. 7.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$20,000,000.00
Revenue:
$54,956,140.00