Saturday, February 2, 2013

Film review: 'Warm Bodies' brings life to zombie and romance ...

This film image released by Summit Entertainment shows Nicholas Hoult, left, and Teresa Palmer in a scene from "Warm Bodies." (AP Photo/Summit Entertainment, Jonathan Wenk)

It?s a toss-up which genre more needs the adrenaline boost "Warm Bodies" provides: the zombie movie or the romantic comedy.

This hybrid follows R (Nicholas Hoult), an undead young man who still maintains some vague memories of life before the zombie infestation that?s turned most of America into slow-moving undead. The zombies are split between "corpses" like R and his pal M (Rob Corddry), who try to hold on to a semblance of humanity, and "skeletons" (aka "bonies") who are just ruthless flesh-eating monsters.

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?Warm Bodies?

Opens Friday, Feb. 1, at theaters everywhere; rated PG-13 for zombie violence and some language; 97 minutes.

When R encounters the pretty and feisty Julie (Teresa Palmer), whose father (John Malkovich) commands the last human outpost, R has his first stirrings of human emotion ? while also eating the brains of Julie?s boyfriend Perry (Dave Franco), thus reliving Perry?s memories and feelings. Soon, R?s crush on Julie starts to affect the other zombies, signaling a change that could bring peace to the raging human-zombie war.

Director-screenwriter Jonathan Levine ("50/50"), adapting Isaac Marion?s novel, plays with zombie-movie conventions (using R?s funny and observational voice-over) and steals some moves from Shakespeare to create a teen romance no more awkward than most.

Hoult ("X-Men: First Class") and Palmer (who?s like Kristen Stewart, except blond and capable of smiling) have a chemistry that brings this zombie story to life.

movies@sltrib.com; www.sltrib.com/entertainment


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Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/entertainment2/55726369-223/zombie-bodies-human-julie.html.csp

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