Total Film

Pride + Prejudice + Zombies

Dead cheeky…

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It is a truth universall­y acknowledg­ed that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains.” Whether or not you just winced will tell you how much you’re likely to enjoy Pride + Prejudice + Zombies. Burr Steers’ ( 17 Again) film takes Jane Austen’s classic 1813 novel – the turbulent love story of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet – and sets it during an undead plague. Naturally, this means that Bennet, played by Cinderella’s Lily James, is now a master of martial arts; while Darcy (Sam Riley), styled like a member of My Chemical Romance, is England’s foremost zombie killer.

The film’s based on the eponymous 2009 novel by Seth Graham-Smith, the author who spawned the literary-horror mash-up genre but didn’t do it any favours with his self-scripted adaptation of Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, a film which was neither sharp nor fun enough to translate the trend to the screen. P+P+ Z, however, might just do it.

Tonally, Steers hits the mark: rather than constantly winking at the audience, he plays straight and measured, executing the whole thing as if it makes perfect sense. As such, there’s a pleasingly seamless fit between Austen’s original text – a treatise on marriage, wealth and class – and scenes such as the Bennet sisters, in period dress and armed with swords, slicing a ballroom full of zombies to bits. It’s a surreal dance of old and new, but one handled with poker-faced grace by the cast, from Charles Dance as patriarch Mr Bennet to his Game Of Thrones co-star Lena Headey as the badass Lady Catherine de Bourgh. The exception to all this underplayi­ng is Matt Smith, who hams it up hilariousl­y as doddery priest Mr. Collins.

So far, so funny; but before long it becomes awkwardly apparent that this is a film rooted in the single gag ‘LOL zombies’ – a novelty that, while sharply done, needs more narrative brawn to sustain it. The biggest problem is act three, which builds to a zombie invasion that’s not only surprising­ly dull but, unlike earlier, struggles to mesh with Austen’s dramatic beats. You can’t help wondering what the author would be more startled by – seeing her most famous work hosed down with gore, or the Elizabeth/Darcy relationsh­ip handled so bloodlessl­y.

THE VERDICT For the most part a surprising­ly fun, bloody take on Jane Austen’s classic – but it does turn stale as the final reckoning approaches.

› Certificat­e 15 Director Burr Steers Starring Lily James, Sam Riley, Matt Smith, Charles Dance, Lena Headey Screenplay Burr Steers Distributo­r Lionsgate Running Time 108 mins

‘Tonally it’s played as if the whole thing makes perfect sense’

 ??  ?? She’ll regret not covering her brain with a bonnet...
She’ll regret not covering her brain with a bonnet...
 ??  ??

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