Overlord (2018)
Dir. by Julius Avery
Written
by Billy Ray, Mark
L. Smith
Starring Jovan Adepo, Wyatt Russell, Mathilde
Ollivier, John Magaro,
Pilou Asbæk
I have a special fascination with genre hybrids, and, of
course, particularly with horror genre hybrids. And there is no shortage of these; horror is an almost endless
malleable genre, able to absorb other tones, styles, iconography, and structure,
which makes almost unlimited mash-ups possible. I’ve seen horror/comedy, art-horror,
action-horror, horror-westerns, horror/romances, horror/crime, sci-fi/horror, superhero
horror, even horror documentary, just to name a few. These genre-straddling exercises
can be fun because they shake up the usual formula and expectations we have for stock fiction structure, but they’re even more
interesting to me as experiments with the very medium of genre. Smashing
different tropes together and seeing what survives can be revealing about the
nature of the genres themselves: why they work, what they mean, what elements
are essential to the mechanism, and what elements turn out to be surprisingly
replaceable. Consequently a WWII-men-on-mission movie crossed with a zombie/mad
science flick sounded right up my ally. Not, of course, that it would be the first
war/horror hybrid I’d ever seen, nor even the first Nazi zombie flick
I’d ever seen (they go back to fucking 1941’s KING OF THE ZOMBIES and its first
sequel, and run comfortably through 1966’s THE FROZEN DEAD and 1977’s SHOCK
WAVES to 1981’s ZOMBIE LAKE to modern schlock like 2009’s DEAD SNOW). Still,
the men-on-a-mission element (a venerable subgenre in its own right) struck me
as a good angle, as did the historical setting. If OVERLORD could hardly boast
at being the first to get here, I still thought there was a solid chance it
could generate something interesting from its motley collection of genre elements.
Or at least, I did until I saw it was a JJ Abrams production.
OK, he didn’t direct it (that would be Julius Avery, his sophomore film after
the go-nowhere crime thriller SON OF A GUN) or write it (that would be Billy
Ray, of a very weird career that begins with THE COLOR OF NIGHT and runs from
the laughably inept VOLCANO and SUSPECT ZERO to the rather classy STATE OF PLAY
and Oscar-nominated CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, and Mark L. Smith, who has a much more
consistent resume of middlebrow horror trash except that he co-wrote the
fucking REVENANT!). But even from the trailer, I could see that this would be a
strictly Abrams affair. By which I mean, slick, flashy production and a
relentlessly overthought structure hiding the fact that there isn't any real content at the center of it all. That Abrams touch.
Sure enough, that’s exactly what happens here. Despite OVERLORD's near-constant attempts to twist itself into shapes convoluted enough that they
might elicit a flicker of mild surprise, the only actual unexpected thing about
the movie is how long it takes for the genre-hybrid element to enter the picture.
It’s a men-on-a-mission WWII story for much longer than it’s a horror movie, and
it’s surprisingly committed to that war movie angle --at least financially,
which is the only meaningful measure of intent here—obviously spending a good
portion of its ample budget on rather extravagant battle scenes, as well as a
Bokeem Woodbine (WISHMASTER 2: EVIL NEVER DIES) cameo. Some of it is rather nicely appointed; the aerial battle
that opens the film is efficient enough to be exciting in a empty sort of way, and
the cinematography by Laurie Rose (every Ben Wheatley film) and Fabian Wagner
(JUSTICE LEAGUE) is perfectly handsome, if a bit bland. But of course the movie-killing
problem here is that this is not a men-on-a-mission film; we know from
the damn poster that this is all just a feint, that their war movie chicanery
is a prelude to an abrupt swerve towards an altogether different kind of movie
(the kind with Nazi zombies, AKA the kind of movie that you’d actually be
interested in watching). Consequently, any real investment we might have in
the first half of the movie is stillborn. The cast is adequate, but nowhere
near committed enough to instill their one-note characters* with anything that
would independently be worth our time, and so a huge portion of the film just
becomes a tedious waiting game while they coyly tease that we’re eventually
gonna get to the good stuff.
And then, finally, we get there, and… the movie suddenly
ends! After more than an hour of teasing us with some good old fashioned Nazi
zombie fun, we officially learn about the existence of experimental Nazi super-zombies
and then easily dispatch them (as well as a couple hundred of their living
colleagues) in what feels like 20 minutes of a overlong 110. It feels
unbalanced, like the movie is missing an act or something. They finally get to
the zombies, and then jump right into the big climactic fight scene (which isn’t
really any great shakes itself, though there’s a gruesome CGI-assisted facial
wound which is pretty cool) without any warm-up.
That leaves us with a movie which pretty much spends its
whole runtime threatening to happen without ever getting there. A movie which
has a lot of stuff in it, but never commits to any one thing enough to make an
impact. A movie which is all conspicuously moving parts hiding an empty center.
A mystery box with no mystery. You know, a JJ Abrams production. I’d still be
interested someday in seeing a men-on-a-mission/horror hybrid,** but this isn’t
really a hybrid at all. You’d have to be two things to be a hybrid, and this isn’t
enough of anything to make for an interesting experiment.
*Or less; the movie can’t seem to make up its mind about
what Wyatt Russell’s single note is even supposed to be, and he vacillates
wildly from badass cynic to straight-up villain with no real logic or benefit
to the story.
** There are, of course, already a couple; DOG SOLIDERS, for
example, or DEAD BIRDS, THE SUPERNATURALS, THE BUNKER, THE HILLS HAVE EYES 2
(2007). But not too many prominent examples.
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2019 CHECKLIST!
For Richer or Horror
TAGLINE
|
IMDB says Stop The
Unstoppable, but I didn’t notice that on any of the posters.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
It’s supposed to take
place during operation Overlord but other than that there’s not a lot of
reason for that to be the title, especially in light of the existence of the 1975
British docu-drama OVERLORD, which is actually about the real Operation
Overlord and uses real war footage, and also happens to be one of the
greatest war movies ever made.
|
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
None
|
SEQUEL?
|
None
|
REMAKE?
|
None.
|
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
|
USA
|
HORROR SUB-GENRE
|
Zombie,
Nazi-Zombie, mad science
|
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
Bokeem Woodbine?
|
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
|
None
|
NUDITY?
|
None.
|
SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
Yeah the lead Nazi gets
really gross and rapey with a captive French resistance member. Did they
really not think we had enough reason to hate this character?
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
No
|
GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
|
Zombies, although of a
mad-science sort
|
POSSESSION?
|
None
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
|
None
|
EVIL CULT?
|
None
|
MADNESS?
|
None
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
Yes
|
VOYEURISM?
|
Our boys spend much
time –like, too much time, in fact-- hidden in an attic watching Nazi soldiers
stand around and act like assholes to the homeowner downstairs.
|
MORAL OF THE STORY
|
Now more than ever we
need to take the time to appreciate how baller FRANKENSTEIN’S ARMY was.
|
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