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Zombies - Wicked Little Things [DVD]

3.1 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Lori Heuring, Scout Taylor-Compton, Chloe Meretz, Geoffrey Lewis, Ben Cross
  • Directors: J. S. Cardone
  • Producers: J. S. Cardone, Boaz Davidson, Danny Lerner, David Varod
  • Format: PAL
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Momentum Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: 21 July 2008
  • Run Time: 94 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0016FM79U
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 49,099 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Horror film in which recently widowed Karen Tunny (Lori Heuring) and her two daughters, Sarah (Scout Taylor-Compton) and Emma (Chloe Moretz), inherit a remote mountain home from the family of Karen's late husband. The Tunny women struggle to adapt to their new surroundings, mostly due to the fact that their home is surrounded by child zombies - the victims of a terrible mining accident that occured 100 years before.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

It's always nice when you go into a movie expecting it to be shoddy at best and dreadful at worst, but end up really enjoying it; that's what happened to me with this one.

Zombies mixes the genres of ghost stories and zombies, and does it well: a recently widowed mother moves her two daughters to a house in the mountains which they inherited in her husband's will. The house is close to an old mine where many children died. At night the children come out to feed.

I was expecting a really low budget movie with weak actors but that wasn't the case at all. The effects are simple but effective and the plot well executed; characters have been well cast with the youngest daughter giving an oustanding performance. The film has some eery moments and a fair amount of gore. By no means is this is a classic but at under a fiver it is well worth a watch.
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Firstly,lets get this straightened out, they are not zombies. I don't know why they used this title, I believe the US title is Wicked Little Things, which is far more fitting.
Now, misleading titles and cannabalistic gore aside (both if which are there just to compliment each other and don't really have a place in this film), this is actually quite a nice little ghost story for bedtime. If you can forgive the zombie faux pas, you will see that this film posesses all the nice qualities of a traditional bedtime ghost story. The plot is rather good, the visuals aren't bombarded with melodramatic music, it is quiet and gentle, with evil ghosts that you can sympathize with. It has the typical nightime scenes in the woods, old houses, old newspaper cuttings that tell the story of the children who worked in the mines. All these things are used well,and not overdone.

The gore is a bit too much, it is too obviously an attempt to gross you out, which is not needed. Personally, I feel that horror films have become so obsessed with being as gorey as possible, that cinema is really missing some good old fashioned ghost stories, this is one that I think is judged too harshly, okay, so it's not as good as the Orphanage, but it is worth watching.
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Always on the hunt for a horror bargain, I picked up Zombies: Wicked Little Things. The plot outline is revealed in the opening minutes of the movie with a nice scene set in the mines of 1913 and the fate of the children at the hands of the greedy mine owner is established, providing a nice backstory for the film to work from.

Zombies: Wicked Little Things boasts quite the cast with young horror stars Scout Taylor Compton (Rob Zombie's Halloween) and Chloe Moretz (Kick-Ass, Let Me In) alongside the legendary Geoffrey Lewis (The Devil's Rejects) who helps explain the legend behind the malevolent children; and the always impressive and underused Ben Cross (Dark Shadows: The Revival, Exorcist: The Beginning). My problem with the casting cropped up when Tim showed his face... it was Ethan from Hollyoaks (Craig Vye) sporting a ridiculous floppy hairdo and a ridiculous attempt at an American accent!

After viewing for a while, I was concerned with the title of the film since to my mind, these are not classic cinematic zombies and I am of the opinion that the makers have chosen this title simply to cash in on the popularity of the genre. The "zombies" here are not mindless shambling ghouls but vengeful undead children intent on killing those who enter the woods and searching for the bloodline of the man who sealed their fate. Don't worry fiends, there's plenty of flesh-eating to keep you going.

There's nothing overly complex about the plot or set up of ZWLT and ultimately, for me, the film plays out like a dark fairytale with appropriate moral messages strewn throughout the film. However, despite the fact that kids in horror movies are generally creepy and this flick has enough gore and death to keep it ticking along, it's just not scary on any level.
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A widow and her daughters move into the inherited family home and get terrorised by “zombie” kids from the local Carlton mining disaster that occurred many years earlier.

You know very early from the off that we the audience are going to be asked a lot of as regards character behaviours and rationales. The grieving mother moves herself and her daughters into what can only be described as an isolated pig sty, and right from the off all the warning signs are there for them that all is not well in this part of town.

Story unravels in standard revenge from the grave formation, but the setting is very much in the film’s favour even if the core story is not. Creepy forest, crumbling abodes and the spectre of the mine disaster ready to unleash its secret. The kids themselves are actually ghosts who eat meat, human or animal, so it was a tenuous marketing strategy to be calling it a zombie film.

However, the kids themselves are splendidly ghoulish, pale faced and dark eyed, these very much are creepy kids. Low tone cinematography and gentle pacing help the mood considerably, and cast performances are fine given that the writing saddles them with weak dialogue exchanges and drawn out sequences obviously used to extend the running time. A teen romance strand involving the eldest daughter also just feels like filler.

A modest spooker but certainly watchable enough, atmosphere and location setting ensure this is the case. 4/10
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