Rating summary
Movie | | 3.0 |
Video | | 4.0 |
Audio | | 4.0 |
Extras | | 3.5 |
Overall | | 3.0 |
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead Blu-ray Movie Review
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman December 9, 2014
We’re already well into film awards season, with films like
Boyhood starting to steamroll their way through various fêtes on toward the grand prize, that little golden man known as Oscar.
While most major awards ceremonies tend to honor by now well worn categories like Best Film, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Director, I’d
like to propose a new category for some enterprising entrepreneur who wants to build a celebration into (hopefully) a nationally televised
event: Best Tag Line. And for the 2014 award, I think we can just cut to the chase and give the trophy to Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead
for its wonderfully punny ad copy which states “the sequel you did Nazi coming.” As my colleague Casey Broadwater mentioned in his review of
Dead Snow, Nazi zombies are nothing new, having
been a cinematic staple of sorts for several decades now. I frankly never caught the first Dead Snow, but I’ve had my fair share of Nazi zombie movies to review (War of the Dead, anyone?), a perhaps telling commentary on just how many of
this subgenre are around, kind of like a certain horde of walking dead. Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead doesn’t try to radically reinvent
anything, simply picking up from where the first film evidently left off and continuing the misadventures of hero Martin (Vegar Hoel), the sole
human survivor (albeit missing one arm) of a rampaging Nazi zombie attack in the wilds of Norway.
Even for those who, like me, never saw the original
Dead Snow,
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead begins with a brief recap
offering
the greatest hits (or, considering the amount of vivisection on display, greatest
splits) of the first film, as Norman’s voiceover gives us
a
very quick but more or less complete
précis of what has already gone down. Those vicious Nazis had been on the hunt for some
hidden
gold, which Norman and his hapless friends had had the misfortune of stumbling across. Norman had been bitten by a zombie, but knew
enough to simply saw off the appendage with the bite to prevent the spread of incipient zombieism, hence his missing right arm. The sequel
begins with a mad action sequence which capably defines the film’s manic comedy style, as Norman tries to get the hell out of the Nazi
infestation with a bunch of stormtroopers attached to his car. That situation delivers
another shorn arm right into Norman’s car, an
amputation that presents a wealth of comic opportunities further down
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead’s rather bloody road.
In a complete state of panic, Martin ends up crashing the car, and wakes up happily ensconced in a hospital where a “helpful” doctor has
“reattached” what he
thought was Martin’s arm, but which in fact is that Nazi appendage from the car. That’s the least of Martin’s
problems (at least for a little while, anyway), as the concerned local constabulary has come to the conclusion that Martin is a mad serial killer
who has offed all of his friends (and his girlfriend, to boot). When Martin starts ranting about Nazi zombies, the cops are only more
convinced about that “mad” part.
Martin is horrified of course to discover he now has a formerly Nazi arm sewn onto his body, and he’s even
more horrified when the
arm tries to take things into its own hand (so to speak), attacking the doctors and cops. That gets Martin heavily sedated and tied down to
his bed, where he experiences a vision that the Nazi, under the leadership of Herzog (Ørjan Gamst), are on the rampage, coming down from
their mountain lair. A curious American kid who has wandered (unwisely) into Martin’s hospital room frees him from his shackles while also
alerting Martin to the fact that there’s an American Zombie Squad
very interested in Martin’s odd looking arm (which the kid has
texted a picture of to the group with his phone). That arm wreaks a bit more havoc, including with the kid (in one of the film’s more
spectacularly gross but undeniably hilarious moments), but at least Martin is finally free to take on the Nazis.
Martin has ended up with the little boy’s phone and is quickly in contact with the Zombie Squad, a group which reassures him about their
“professionalism” and that they’ll be coming as soon as possible to help, but that Martin needs to find out exactly what the Nazis are after. A
quick reveal shows us that (of course) the Zombie Squad is simply a trio of
poseurs who have absolutely no clue about anything,
other than that they musn’t let their parents know what they’re up to. Nonetheless, Martin is heartened and sets out to discover why the
Nazis are continuing to rampage.
The bulk of the film actually ends up taking place in and around a huge war museum which has a significant portion devoted to Nazi
memorabilia, a collection which provides an important clue as to who exactly Herzog was (is?) and why he seems so relentlessly preoccupied
with this little corner of Norway. In the meantime, Norman has to deal with a hipster museum attendant (Stig Frode Henriksen, who also co-
wrote the film) who becomes increasingly frantic
once the zombies show up, as well as the Zombie Squad, who do indeed make it to Norway to help fight the good fight.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead doesn’t have any outsized ambitions, but what it does have is a very dark but effective sense of humor.
There are a number of laugh out loud kill scenes scattered throughout the film, with totally over the top, gross out splatter effects and
everything from poor, paralyzed people getting trampled by Nazis to a hapless woman getting pulverized by a marauding Nazi tank. The
verbal interplay is decidedly more mundane, but does contain a few nice
bon mots along the way (the hipster museum attendant
begs for mercy when grabbed by Norman’s monster Nazi arm, exclaiming, “I have two cats!”)
This is a patently silly film that
knows it’s ridiculous, unlike a number of more serious minded, supposedly high-falutin’ horror fare
(including several zombie films). Performances are surprisingly spry and also unexpectedly good is the film’s slate of special effects, some
CGI and some practical. This film apparently tanked at the box office, but it’s a lot of fun in its own weird little way and should keep armchair
Nazi zombie hunters warm throughout the winter season.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Well Go USA (though the film also carries an Entertainment One logo)
with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 2.39:1. This digitally shot feature looks pretty spectacular quite a bit of the time, with close-ups revealing
ample fine detail (see screenshot 1). Quite a bit of the film plays out in shrouded, blue tinted, environments, a choice which depletes the film of
shadow detail and detail in general at times. Highlights occasionally come close to blooming in some of the more wintry scenes, but contrast is
on
the whole consistent. The blood and guts effects, which are numerous, offer a lot of opportunity for the palette to both literally and figuratively
pop quite impressively.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead features a generally quite immersive DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track in English (an international version is
also included with both Norwegian and French audio options). There are a glut of great, sometimes "gooey", sounding effects lavished on the
zombie invasion sequences which add a dash of sonic intrigue. Dialogue is very cleanly presented, and there's even a spate of LFE in some of
the more forceful action moments. The mix is very well prioritized with excellent fidelity and no problems of any kind to report.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras
- Død snø 2 (1080p; 1:40:54) is the International Version of the film with either Norwegian Dolby Digital 5.1 or French
Dolby Digital 5.1 audio. Optional English subtitles are available.
- Short Film: Armen (1080i; 13:59)
- VFX Breakdown (1080p; 1:53) is a brief look at some of the film's special effects.
- Dead Snow Comic Book (1080p; 2:16)
- Trailer (1080p; 2:21)
- Audio Commentary by Writer-Director Tommy Wirkola
Note: Well Go USA has once again authored the disc so that all supplements follow each other automatically. It's necessary to press Top
Menu to get out of the Supplements once any one of them has begun.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead is just flat out goofy fun, at least most of the time. There's little doubt the film is stuffed to the gills with
stereotypical characters, but the screenplay is surprisingly witty for such a resolutely silly premise, and my hunch is most people will find at least
a couple of laugh out loud moments sprinkled throughout the general mayhem. Technical merits are very strong, and in what may indeed be the
latest sign of the coming zombie apocalypse, Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead comes Recommended.