Overlord oozes blood, sweat and zombies
Nazi-fighting film filled with blood, sweat and zombies ... and more zombies
Just a few months ago saw the release of Trench 11, a Canadian horror film that featured Allied soldiers near the end of the First World War investigating nefarious, zombie-esque goings-on in an underground German bunker. Well, here’s the sequel of sorts, one World War later, with a few million more in the production budget.
The opening minutes are a real Sturm und Drang affair (if that’s not being insensitive), with a U.S. airborne unit flying over the English Channel and parachuting down in advance of the D -Day landings in occupied France. As first scenes go, it’s the Saving Private Ryan of zombie movies.
Among the squad are an Everyman named Boyce (Jovan Adepo), explosives expert Ford (Wyatt Russell) and Brooklyn wiseacre Tibbet (John Magaro). Separated from the rest of their unit — most of whom don’t make it — they come upon Chloe (Mathilde Ollivier), who lives in the nearby town with her little brother; neither fancies the Nazis.
Director Julius Avery, working from a screenplay by Billy Ray (Captain Phillips) and Mark L.
Smith (The Revenant) — and, it’s worth noting, under the auspices of sci-fi producer extraordinaire J.J. Abrams — crafts an entertaining men-on-a-mission story, complete with a Mengelewannabe doctor (Erich Redman) and a nasty Nazi commander (Denmark’s Pilou Asbaek) who at one point gets to snarl: “The thousand-year Reich needs thousand-year soldiers!”
But the supernatural elements are somewhat downplayed, especially early on. The soldiers’ original mission is to destroy a radio tower that could help the Nazis when the real fighting starts; only gradually do they become aware that the church that houses that equipment also has something unholy happening in its lower levels.
As it continues, Overlord announces clearly that it has nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat. And brains.