Monday, November 26, 2018

Lost In Apocalypse



Lost In Apocalypse [sic] (2018) aka Mo Shi Ren Jian Dao
Dir. Sky Wang
Written by Sky Wang, Fei'er Zhao, Baiying Wu (story), based on the comics by Ruibo Cao
Starring Tianming Yang, Yang Yang, Yinan Zhang, Yuchao Wang



            On a whim, I sampled some modern Chinese (mainland, not Hong Kong) horror cinema last year with the infuriatingly terrible SINGULAR CAY, a film so absolutely bottom-of-the-barrel abysmal that I felt it was almost cruel to not give China a chance to redeem itself this year. Any country can have an off day, after all. What if I was a Chinese movie blogger and the only American horror film I’d ever reviewed was IT’S IN THE BLOOD? Wouldn’t be very fair. So when I saw that the AFI was screening LOST IN APOCALYPSE with this year’s annual Spooky Movie Festival, I thought it must be fate. 

           And maybe it was, but if it was fate, it was fate telling me not to bother next year, because LOST IN APOCALYPSE, while not as desperately miserable and inept as SINGULAR CAY, is pretty damn low on anything worth defending.

It is the tale of several people who are at some kind of ill-defined business meeting about a school (maybe it’s clearer what the fuck is going on in the original Mandarin, but the subtitles turn it into a completely inscrutable mystery) when a zombie outbreak happens (the kind with the running zombies). Most of these people are either complete cyphers or horrible assholes, so they argue and snipe at each other for a long time, pick up a recently orphaned little girl (Qianhua Chen, GUARDIANS OF THE TOMB), and eventually they pile in a car and drive to this big abandoned warehouse or factory or something. Again, it’s weirdly unclear what this place is, or who the guys in orange jumpsuits that seem to live there are, or what the connection is to any of the other victims. “Director Wu” (possibly Fengzhu Jia [THE CRAZY KELP], though IMDB doesn’t list the character’s name) seems to have some kind of business relationship with them, but I thought he was the head of a school? I don’t know if it’s just standard practice in China that every school “director” is also issued a dilapidated warehouse complex full of jumpsuited henchmen or what. But anyway, they go there, and the guys in orange suits obviously turn out to be even bigger assholes than the zombies, and they naturally want to rape the little girl.* So it’s up to the least unpleasant of them (Martin Yang, no other IMDB credits) to escape from an easily escapable death trap (thrown into a room with an angry zombie, but it turns out the room just has another door you can walk out of) and, I dunno, learn the true meaning of sacrificing yourself for the greater good or whatever.

Gripping, gripping stuff.
 So now you’re saying “OK, and then what?” And this is the trouble. That’s the whole thing: there is a group of generally obnoxious people that are first stuck in a meeting room, and then show up at a warehouse and get tied up and lightly menaced by some assholes before the zombies inevitably get loose again and the most tolerable guy fights the least tolerable guy and everyone else has to heroically sacrifice themselves to allow the women and children to get away. Roll credits. It’s all tarted up slightly with a spectacularly unnecessary shuffled chronology which starts in the middle and flashes back to the beginning, but that one run-on sentence handily covers every significant event in the entire movie. There are zero surprises here, nary a single frame in the whole thing which isn’t baseline standard zombie movie boilerplate. I mean, nothing. Not a single new concept, not one clever gimmick, not one imaginative twist, not a solitary memorable horror beat. It’s exactly everything you would expect at the bare-bones minimum for some low-budget zombie trash SyFy channel original movie, and absolutely nothing more. And fuck, even SyFy would want at least some kind of hook in there, like a zombie tornado or a Dractopus or something. 

            Such a punishing dearth of imagination would be a difficult, but by no means impossible, deficiency for a zombie movie to overcome; after all, plenty of perfectly fine genre movies have been content to play out the expected beats without tinkering with a good thing. In point of fact, many overly ambitious movies with eyes to reinvent the genre have managed to completely bungle a surefire formula. But LOST IN APOCALYPSE not only doesn’t offer anything fresh and imaginative, it just plain doesn’t offer anything. Zero good deaths, no gnarly zombie makeup, not even any significant gore! Heck, with the exception of a few translated curse words and the threat (thankfully never delivered) of child rape, you could easily play this unedited on TV with not a moment altered. As horror movies go, it’s a shockingly PG affair. 

This is about the most elaborate zombie makeup you're gonna get.

            This being a Chinese movie, of course, in place of that gore is: melodrama. I’m not a political scientist but I’m pretty sure it’s written in their Constitution that all movies, no matter how trashy and exploitative, must, by law, feature at least four scenes where sad piano music comes up and somebody flashes back to the time a sad thing happened to them, and then says something earnest and polite, and then stares into the middle distance sadly. This happens an intolerable amount in LOST IN APOCALYPSE, but unlike the Korean TRAIN TO BUSAN (from whence it cribs any plot elements not lifted from 28 DAYS LATER), the melodrama feels completely tracked-on and unimportant, and the characters, despite the punishing amount of time we spend listening to them explain their tedious life stories, are all dishwater-dull archetypes with one or less defining personality trait. Our hero, the most tolerable one, has only one thing about him, which is that he is embarrassed he dropped out of college years ago and is now a driver. That’s it, that’s his whole character motivation, and it feels like it must take 30 minutes of screentime to establish that, not that it ends up mattering one iota (in fact, it’s made even more insipid by the fact that a zombie apocalypse has recently rendered all quotidien social status utterly moot, a fact which appears to never once occur to the movie). So the biggest emotional turmoil in the film comes from shame over never getting a diploma which is wholly worthless now. And the rest of the characters are even less interesting than that.



            It's technically more competent than SINGULAR CAY, and vaguely more focused, but then again, it also doesn't have that movie's advantage of being fucking insane. It's just phenomenally undistinguished. It's the cinematic equivalent of a tepid glass of plain water. Maybe there's nothing terribly wrong with it, but surely anyone interested in making a meal ought to aspire to more. Fortunately, just as I was starting to really think Chinese cinema had completely disappointed me again, I remembered that, like most things in this world, when you look closely you’ll realize that it’s actually America’s fault. Director Sky Wang, as it turns out, was born in Shenyang, China, but “immigrated to the West in his formative years,” as his IMDB puts it. He’s lived in the UK, Canada, and the US, and has a degree from University of Columbia, Chicago. In fact, his two previous short films (from 2010 and 2012) are both in English, and this is his first Chinese credit of any kind. Which means that, damn it, this still wasn’t a fair shot for Mainland Chinese cinema. It’d be like judging John Woo’s career from watching BROKEN ARROW and PAYCHECK. Which means it looks like I’m doomed to try another one next year. Lost in Apocalypse indeed.



           Alternate Opinion: “Lost in Apocalypse" will trigger your mind to think in a twisted manner but then again it will align you in the path of truth, to acknowledge the anomalies of the human mind and to learn to accept it as it comes. If I had to sum this film up in one line, it would be "The Awakening of Human conscience albeit through acceptance." -- IMDB user “CultCriticMovieAwards” August 2, 2018. Looking at his comment history makes it apparent that he's some kind of shill who gets paid to give excessively positive reviews to crappy little movies no one has ever heard of, but you gotta appreciate his willingness to really swing for the fences on this one.

*   In fact, they really remind one of the asshole soldiers who do the exact same thing in 28 DAYS LATER (which in turn makes one ponder the many, many other purely coincidental similarities between the two movies), except this is made for a mainland Chinese audience and they damn sure aren’t going to be saying anything bad about soldiers.

Good question.

CHAINSAWNUKAH 2018 CHECKLIST!
Searching For Bloody Pictures

TAGLINE
None apparent. Come on China, you don’t get to be the world’s foremost superpower without upping your tagline game a little.
TITLE ACCURACY
I’m confused about the ungrammatical title, because most of the on-screen translation seems OK. Maybe it’s a metaphor, or it makes more sense in Mandarin?
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
Yes, supposedly adapted from the comic by Ruibo Cao, though a Google search reveals nothing whatsoever of the kind, and the only thing I can definitively find online attributed to a “Rubio Cao” is what appears to be a book of French cartoon erotica entitled (NSFW)“l'ombre et le feu 2.” EDIT: Oh wait, looks like it's an anthology and he did only one part, if the identified author "Cao R" really is the same guy. Anyway, the translated version of the French review from manga-news.com raves, "Once again, the program is varied while focusing on a refined eroticism. On the other hand, and it is a pity, clearly less historical references are given here." Sounds pretty classy.

Also WARNING, that link is just to amazon, but there are boobs on the front cover of the book, and you don't want to get fired by clicking on an amazon link for maybe a book written by the obscure author of a comic on which this crappy movie is allegedly based. Or maybe you do, hell, I don't know. You do you.
SEQUEL?
None
REMAKE?
None
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
China
HORROR SUB-GENRE
Zombie, Apocalyptic horror
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
None
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
None
NUDITY?
None
SEXUAL ASSAULT?
The threat of child rape, though it mercifully doesn’t ever actually happen
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
No
GHOST/ ZOMBIE / HAUNTED BUILDING?
A decent surfeit of zombies
POSSESSION?
No
CREEPY DOLLS?
No
EVIL CULT?
None.
MADNESS?
None
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
Just human into zombie.
VOYEURISM?
None
MORAL OF THE STORY
Like all modern Chinese movies trying to suck up to the government, there can really be only one moral: Really the most important thing in life is sacrificing yourself for the good of the group.



3 comments:

  1. An image search for 末世人间道 漫画 turns up several pages of what I think is the comic. The art, to my eye, isn't great.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for the tip, Matthew! At least it looks like the scale of the comic might be a little more ambitious.

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    2. At the very least, this cover https://goo.gl/images/FydgFT seems to suggest the comic has 100% more hot ninja chicks in tight leather body suits, which would certainly improve any movie.

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