Detention of the Dead


Zombies are hot. In addition to AMC’s smash hit The Walking Dead on the small screen, Warm Bodies raked in $117 million worldwide early this year and World War Z bounced back from some bad pre-release buzz to chew up the box office this summer to the tune of a $526 million accumulated haul, but there are plenty of other zombie tales out there too — including one likely shot, quite literally, for the catering budget on Brad Pitt‘s film.

Putting a Shaun of the Dead-like spin on one of filmmaker John Hughes’ beloved teen classics, Detention of the Dead centers on an oddball (and at-odds) collection of high school students who find themselves trapped in detention while all their classmates and teachers outside have turned into zombies. If its budget and cramped settings sometimes let it down, director Alex Craig Mann, in his feature debut, shows a nice ability to juggle character-rooted comedy and horror, in a manner that would surely make a young Sam Raimi proud.

Geeky but tightly wound Eddie (Jacob Zachar), who may have compromised his lofty college ambitions with a recent slip-up, seems an unlikely fit for detention. But that’s where he finds himself, along with the popular Brad (Jayson Blair), affable stoner punk Ash (21 & Over‘s Justin Chon) and dimwitted jock himbo Jimmy (Max Adler). Eddie’s attentions more naturally gravitate toward Brad’s blonde cheerleader girlfriend, Janet (Christa B. Allen), but wise ass alterna-chick Willow (Alexa Nikolas), Eddie’s partner in zombie film fandom, fancies herself a better fit.

It sounds damning with faint praise (and I suppose it somewhat is), but the easiest and most honest line on Detention of the Dead is that it’s better than it has any reasonable right or need to be, given its aims. A calling card for its maker and young cast, the movie isn’t seeking to reinvent the wheel or radically reinvent formula, and yet the extra thought and care put into it on various levels of production is evident throughout. Composer Cody Westheimer’s score, for instance, is a buoyant treat, as are a number of smart song selections, from Nada Surf’s cover of “Where Is My Mind” to Band of Skulls’ “Impossible” and the Sprites’ peppy, closing “George Romero.”

Working from a re-written script originally penned by Rob Rinow (both share credit), Mann blends together quip-based comedy rooted in familiar high school archetypes, but never in a way which sells his characters short or completely empty. One unusual thing is that the film’s roots lie nominally in a stageplay — a fact which obviously informs some of the slapstick-y horror setpieces that crop up in the second act and beyond. It’s a credit to Detention of the Dead, however, that while it possesses a satirical soul (and indeed apes some of the set-ups of The Breakfast Club), it isn’t just explicitly that: it has its own legs underneath it, and is more of a loose-limbed, energetic homage than anything else.

Mann also shows the ability to marshal his troops and get them on the same page as to the type of movie they’re making, and that’s not without accident — in addition to directing theater, he has an extensive background as an acting teacher. If Zachar is a bit on the nose as Eddie, he and the rest of the cast still have a great rapport with one another. There are far worse cinematic sentences than this Detention, that’s for sure — particularly for those with an affinity for the commingled genres.

Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case in turn stored in a complementary cardboard slipcover, Detention of the Dead comes to DVD presented in 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen, along with a Dolby digital 5.1 surround sound audio track and optional English SDH and Spanish subtitles. In addition to a motion menu and chapter stops, its supplemental features consist of an audio commentary track with Mann in which he discusses the film’s Michigan location shoot as well as some of the trims he had to make in order to condense the production schedule. There’s also a meaty, 40-minute behind-the-scenes featurette which includes lots of on-set footage, obviously, as well as reflections from the cast and crew, who seemed to have had a good time. To purchase the DVD via Half, click here; if Amazon is still your thing, click hereC+ (Movie) B- (Disc)