PONTYPOOL
Sub-Genre- Zombie/Infection
Trailer
In Attendance- Me
Cast Members of Note- Stephen McHattie, Lisa Houle, and Georgina Reilly.
What's it About?- Pissed-off big city DJ Grant Mazzy just got demoted. The poor guy has to move to Ontario, Canada of all places, and host their lame morning drive show; sure, the city has a cool name (Pontypool), but he's doing stories about missing cats and bingo championships while he should be challenging the establishment with his scathing commentary.
When reports of a mob of crazed people (re: zombies) attacking a local hospital roll in, everything starts to go to hell. Grant, his bitchy producer, and the cute as a button tech girl are stuck in the small studio, the only ones who can warn the world about what's unfolding in the small Canuck town; which is that a virus is turning people into language-zombies, and it's all because of the English language. I cry racism!
Will they survive? Will the language-zombies get into the studio and eat/talk them to death? Will Mazzy get the chicks into a threesome before all hope is lost? I won't spoil what comes next here, but suffice it to say that the last act of the film kinda shit the bed for me. Yes, people, that means no threesome.
The Good- The first two thirds of Pontypool are amazing; they're so simple and minimal, that the movie sucks you in and has you feeling pretty much what the characters are... "What in the hell is happening" and "Oh shit, we're so screwed!" It really, really works... until the doctor shows up and "explains" everything. Don't get me wrong, it's still pretty good after that, but the old "less is more" adage should have been adhered to here.
I guess the best part of the movie is wondering could this ever happen? No, I'm sure it couldn't, but within the movie itself I was a believer, even though the whole thought of the English language being infected seems wholly implausible. It's all very original and engrossing actually.
I've always liked Stephen McHattie. A History of Violence, XIII, Watchmen... hell, he even narrated BASEketball which rocked. He's a great character actor, and does a really nice job here. In fact, he pretty much carries the movie for the most part, and he left me wanting to see more of Grant Mazzy. Lisa Houle, and Georgina Reilly were great too, I just think McHattie stole the show.
The Bad- As good as this movie is, it loses its steam by the time the third act rolls around; once the Doctor gets there, it goes from tense to "Ok, I guess I can buy that explanation... I think" territory pretty quick. Had they left the cause of the outbreak a bit more ambiguous, and given us little hints some other way, it would have been far more effective.
The Downright Horrendous- It's a tie! First, the cure; WTF?!? Again, had they left it at "don't speak or we're screwed" it would have been fine. The whole "kill is kiss" thing just didn't get it for me. Second, and possibly most lame of all, is the Doctor; he's not only annoying and poorly acted, he... ok, he's just annoying and poorly acted. The character just felt out of place to me.
The Gory- Not so much gore in this one, although there is some good stuff in a scene or two towards the middle, and the "zombie's" looked cool. Pontypool was really more of a psychological horror flick than a slice and dice.
The Naked- Nope.
Best Line- Anything Grant Mazzy says; his voice is just that damn lyrical.
What did we learn?- Canada doesn't really suck; any country that can give us Glass Tiger, Hockey, Michael J. Fox, Rock n' Roll Nightmare and David Cronenberg, deserves to be loved. Mostly.
Rating- B+ (8.5/10) I'm not afraid to love Pontypool in spite of its faults; it was well conceived, well made, creepy, tense, and even makes you think a bit. It would have easily been an "A" movie if the last part hadn't lost me just a bit, but it's still well worth seeing. Check it out on IFC In-Demand or in theaters (limited release) now.
Final Thoughts- I've noticed that I fall in love far too easily lately, but just look at her man... look at her!