Shaun is just like every other regular guy out there. He’s stuck in a dead end job, has a girlfriend that wants him to be more than he is and has a roommate that is permanently attached to the couch playing video games. He is trying to make sense of his life but there is the little complication of a horde of zombies attempting to kill him and the people his loves.
The story of Shaun (played to the hilt by Simon Pegg) and his attempts to change and understand what exactly he wanted to do with his life was what carried the film and made it a kick to watch. Before he even faced down his first zombie, he was dealing with problems most people must grapple with; dead end job, girlfriend who wanted him to change and be something more and an overall directionless life. The zombies, while the main villains of the film, were also the things that spurred along Shaun’s attempts to change. What also propped this film above other zombie movie was It was how the director, Edgar Wright, made sure to show how all the regular people around Shaun’s neighborhood acted like zombies before they actually turned. His little social commentary went a long way in framing the world Shaun and friends lived and our own by extension (take a look at the person in the cubicle next to you at work and you'll see what I mean).
Shaun of the Dead was thick with laughs throughout, (usually provided by Shaun’s lazy flat mate Ed), and contained the typical blood and gore one would expect in a horror film.
Grade: B
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