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You are here: Home / Archives for Zombie

Zombie

The End Of Jack Cruz (Book Review)

September 11, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

The End Of Jack Cruz Book CoverBook: The End Of Jack Cruz
Year: 2012
Publisher: Montag Press
Author: A. A. Garrison
Language: English
Chapters: 31
Pages: Paperback = 274, E-Book = 276
Type: Novel

 

AA Garrison Author PictureAuthor’s Summary: The movies never prepared him for this, even the ones that ended badly. Jack “Colonel” Jones is suddenly alone in the world. After surviving a plague that decimates the U.S., and perhaps the entire human population, he is left in a junkie’s nightmare where hard drugs are the only remedy for an ongoing virus and dead bodies are his only companions. Sick and desperate, he meets a savior who goes by the name Jack Cruz. Jack Cruz is a hulking behemoth with a giant pistol and stockpile of post-apocalyptic supplies, but he also has a mysterious past and an increasingly disconcerting obsession with the death and decay that surrounds them. As Colonel’s suspicions rise, and he begins to feel complicit in the wrongdoings of his post-apocalyptic roommate, Colonel must grapple new the questions: Can you be moral when there are only two people left on earth? Can there be sanity? And who decides? Is Colonel just paranoid, or are his fears justified? As the stakes heat up and the intensity flares, Colonel must find out the truth and decide – when your only companion in the world might be a murderer, and there is no one left to kill, is surviving worth it? The End of Jack Cruz grabs readers as a plague memoir by a Renfield-like character, Jack “Colonel” Jones, who becomes the unwitting companion to a man on a mission from God to ‘save’ humanity’s final moments. Through tormenting impotence, grinding doubt, and the weakest constitution, Colonel attempts to understand the sole survivor to whom he’s become enslaved. An existential drama, much like Waiting for Godot, The End of Jack Cruz is much more than just a story about two people locked into a battle of survival; it’s the story about a man’s final chance to awaken from life lived in the shadows.

Review: Jack Cruz is a psychology teacher at Seattle University, and a doctor studying virology. He also has his own bastion full of food which is key. Jack is, if I may, a jack of all trades. He is one of the few survivors in a hospital where he works where a woman there needs more drugs or dope so to speak. A virus outbreak called “slick” killed almost every living thing on Earth except for those under this concoction of medication. When another character called Jack also, Jack Jones to be precise, meets up with Jack Cruz there is some perturbing events that happen.

Jack Cruz is not as innocent as he may seem in the beginning, he’s a maniacal killer. People are unsure of events that are taken place until other weird deaths surface which causes Jack Jones, his assistant, to suspect or question his motives and devices that have been taken place. In the end, it may shock you, it may disturb you, but the outcome is clear…this may be The End Of Jack Cruz.

This is a different story, I was expecting zombies – that didn’t happen, this virus decimated the planet and it is very bleak which I liked. Many stories have fairytale-style guidelines but in this you were wondering where it could lead…a big positive for me. Another plus was; there were very few characters. I have said it before in my reviews, when you are involved with only a couple people, it is much more comprehendible and enjoyable to me.

The writing style was not my favorite, it felt like a narrative where Jack Jones is always speaking about Jack Cruz. I would of liked to see the novel from Jack Cruz’s point of view instead. This is one of my pet peeves while reading – it sometimes felt disjointed to me even though I knew who the heroin was. At times the book was unexciting because Jack Jones was always talking to himself about all sorts of daily life. The horror was minimal, I didn’t feel for any of the lead characters, it was quite obvious to me, more of a story of survival, still though…I didn’t have a problem getting through the book.

The End Of Jack Cruz is available on Paperback at many online locations for $15.95. You can also get the E-Book or electronic edition at a price of $4.95. The End Of Jack Cruz has a very colorful book cover that really shines, huge marks for the artist, it really pops. All of my suggestions are below.

[amzn_product_inline asin=’B008NIJHN2′]

 

Reviewer: Dark Goddess
Date: 09/11/2012
Rating: 5/10
Suggestion: Paperback: Avoid
Suggestion: E-Book: Buy

Filed Under: Horror Books, Zombie

This Dark Earth (Book Review)

August 28, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

This Dark Earth Cover PosterBook: This Dark Earth
Year: 2012
Publisher: Gallery Books – Simon & Schuster
Author: John Hornor Jacobs
Language: English
Chapters: 7
Pages: 352
Type: Novel

 

John Hornor JacobsAuthor’s Summary: The land is contaminated, electronics are defunct, the ravenous undead remain, and life has fallen into a nasty and brutish state of nature. Welcome to Bridge City, in what was once Arkansas: part medieval fortress, part Western outpost, and the precarious last stand for civilization. A ten-year-old prodigy when the world ended, Gus is now a battle-hardened young man. He designed Bridge City to protect the living few from the shamblers eternally at the gates. Now he’s being groomed by his physician mother, Lucy, and the gentle giant Knock-Out to become the next leader of men. But an army of slavers is on its way, and the war they’ll wage for the city’s resources could mean the end of mankind as we know it. Can Gus become humanity’s savior? And if so, will it mean becoming a dictator, a martyr . . . or maybe something far worse than even the zombies that plague the land?

Review: Of all of the genres in horror, zombies aren’t my favorite especially when reading, but let me tell you, This Dark Earth had me right from the beginning. A typical zombie story here, as in books and movies alike, the government is involved, a huge chemical leak unfolds and thus a virus is airborne which causes massive destruction and out comes the zombies that eat you to the bone.

We start learning about the leads; Dr. Lucy and her young son Gus, who is only 10 years old. They become the mainstay of the story while we meet boatloads of other survivors. The characters are plentiful in This Dark Earth, it is one of my quibbles about the book. For some reason to me I don’t like heaps of people while reading, it gets very cumbersome and hard to remember, so it is getting ticked down a bit.

The characters are always on the move looking for safe havens and places to stay when they come across Bridge City, which is now called their home. The doctor and kid find other survivors on this western-style desolate apocalyptic landscape that are flippant and trying to take control of the situation. The inevitable doom of hordes of zombies, mischievous leaders and the struggle of daily survival leads to showdowns with the remaining survivors for control of civilization as we know it.

The seedy population captures the young prodigy who has emerged as a leader in this war-torn world. Gus endures tortuous acts of abuse so they can get vital information about the rulers of Bridge City. During all this mayhem, zombies are trying to break down the wall that’s surrounding the city, and the constant fighting amongst the survivors ends with a gripping climax that leads to you wanting more.

This Dark Earth is graphic and I like that in a novel, moreover…you need it in a zombie tale and you get gourdes of it. The book is available on Paperback at every popular retailer out there from Amazon to Barnes & Noble to Books-A-Million to iTunes for $10.98. You can also get the Kindle edition or Nook edition for $9.99 in the electronic format. I am recommending This Dark Earth to all horror readers not only zombie fans because it is worth it. My final tallies and suggestions are below.

[amzn_product_inline asin=’ 1451666667′]

 

Reviewer: Dark Goddess
Date: 08/28/2012
Rating: 7½/10
Suggestion: Paperback: Buy
Suggestion: E-Book: Buy

Filed Under: Horror Books, Zombie

From Within Review

July 19, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

From Within cover posterMovie: From Within
Year: 2008
Studio: Burgundy Films
Director: Phedon Papamichael
Stars: Elizabeth Rice, Thomas Dekker, Kelly Blatz
Language: English
Length: 89 Minutes
Sub-Genres: Witchcraft / Supernatural

Plot: A perpetual string of gruesome suicides plagues a small town. And the reason for this plague may be well-deserved.

Review: The movie that comes to mind when I hear this premise is M. Night Shyamalan’s “The Happening,” which was also released in 2008 and was built around an inexplicable phenomenon of mass suicides. Thankfully, “From Within” is far better than “The Happening,” but I guess that’s not saying much. The eventual explanation for this film’s suicides is much better than Shyamalan’s, to be sure.

Director Phedon Papamichael’s film, “From Within” (2008), has a number of promising ideas for a horror flick: For example, imagine facing off against an evil specter of certain death when the grim reaper I’m referring to is actually one’s own self! That’s right — in “From Within,” the fatal omen is seeing a disturbing version of yourself, coming to kill you in a violent manner that will look like suicide to everyone else, but will feel like cold-blooded murder to you.

Now, if you think about this for a minute, you’ll realize that Papamichael has a clever, circular idea at play here in his film. When a person commits suicide, he takes his own life. But in this movie, there is, for lack of a better description, an evil version of the victims’ selves, killing themselves. So, on one hand, they seem to be murdered by an external force, or another being, but since they appear to be murdered by themselves, isn’t that technically still suicide? Neat, right? Not to mention, being killed by yourself seems like the ultimate betrayal, a concept that’s horrifying in itself.

Another interesting spin that screenwriter Brad Keene gives us is the role reversal of the evil religious zealots versus the sympathetic family of witches. I am reminded of Isaiah’s biblical prophecy which speaks of them that “call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness.” But we see in “From Within” that evil is everywhere, and therefore, inescapable. Keene does more than play with our assessments of good and evil. In many ways, “From Within” is a cautionary tale for intolerance. The subtext seems to be that intolerance of others turns into self-loathing, which in turn, eventually results in self-destruction.

The director, Phedon Papamichael, is actually a long-time cinematographer-turned-director, so he’s no rookie to the film industry. In fact, he was the director of photography on a giant list of mainstream (and some award-winning) well-known film titles, such as “The Descendants,” “Knight and Day,” “3:10 to Yuma,” “Walk the Line,” “Sideways,” “Identity,” and “Cool Runnings,” just to name a few. He also directed “Dark Side of Genius” in 1994. In short, the captain at the helm of this film is a good one, but for some reason that I’m having trouble identifying, “From Within” doesn’t amount to a noteworthy horror film.

Perhaps it’s forgettable. For example, just to give you an idea of how mild the witchcraft theme is in this movie, as I wrote this review, I was planning an upcoming Horror Metropolis episode with a witchcraft theme, in conjunction with Rob Zombie’s forthcoming “The Lords of Salem” (2012). And even though I have been writing the review for “From Within” for the past few hours, it never even came to mind when I was thinking about possible picks for witchcraft movies… So, what does that tell you?

Sure, there are a couple of good kills, such as a big pair of scissors jabbed into a girl’s neck. We’re shown the aftermath, but not the attack. I like the scenery in this film, as well; it was shot in Maryland. How many films are shot in Maryland? The sound design is decent, too, because the victims’ alter egos make this creepy growling noise. But without a doubt, the scariest part of this film is a painting of one character’s great grandmother in the nude (regrettably painted in her later years). Yikes. I bet there’s a story behind that painting (and I’d love to hear it), but there’s no trivia provided on IMDb. If you know anything about that freaky painting, please post a comment below.

“From Within” is just barely below par to qualify for a rental in my book, and ultimately I’d say avoid it … unless, of course, somebody is trying to make you watch “The Happening.” In that case, “From Within” is the lesser of two evils.

DVD Contest: Here is the long-awaited, 2-DVD, 8 horror movie give-away contest word: “Meatloaf.” Helpful hint: The other word you’ll need to win is spoken during Episode 004 of the Horror Metropolis podcast. After you collect these two words, be the first to e-mail HorrorMetropolis@gmail.com and you’ll win! Good luck.

To hear horror movie reviews from Jay of the Dead and his cohorts, listen to Horror Metropolis.

Reviewer: Jay of the Dead
Date: 07/19/2012
Rating: 4.5/10
Recommendation: Avoid
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Amazon
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: N/A

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews, Zombie Tagged With: 2008, after dark films, after dark horrorfest, brad keene, burgundy films, elizabeth rice, from within, horror movie review, jay of the dead, kelly blatz, movie review, phedon papamichael, suicide, supernatural, thomas dekker, witchcraft, written review

The Sentinel (Book Review)

July 16, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

The Sentinel Book Cover PosterBook: The Sentinel
Year: 2011
Publisher: BreakNeck Media
Author: Jeremy Bishop
Language: English
Chapters: 47
Pages: 284
Type: Novel

 

Jeremy Bishop Author PictureAuthor’s Summary: In the frigid waters off the Arctic Ocean, north of Greenland, the anti-whaling ship, The Sentinel, and her crew face off against a harpoon ship in search of Humpback whales. When the two ships collide and a suspicious explosion sends both ships to the bottom, the crews take refuge on what they think is a peninsula attached to the mainland, but is actually an island, recently freed from a glacial ice bridge. Seeking shelter, the two opposing crews scour the island for resources. Instead, they find Viking artifacts, the preserved remains of an ancient structure and a stone totem warning of horrible creatures buried in the island’s caves. Facing violent, frigid storms, a hungry polar bear and the very real possibility that they are stranded without hope of rescue, Jane Harper leads the two crews, who must work together to defend themselves against an ancient evil upon which the modern stories of both zombies and vampires are based. The original undead are awake and hungry. Beware the Draugar.

Review: I loved The Sentinel; I couldn’t put this book down. It is one of the best horror novels I have read in a long time. It captured and kept my attention span the whole time. I read The Sentinel in two sittings. I would of read it straight through if I didn’t have to get up for work the next morning. I thought about The Sentinel during my daily chores at the office and rushed home to finish the novel after supper.

The Sentinel has it all; zombies, vampires, mystery, suspense, crime, investigations and a titillating level of detail. You have two organizations; one that is exterminating whales to protect civilization and one that lands in the middle; some good characters and some bad. When the Vikings attempt to blow up the ship to stop the madness, a catastrophe happens and both vessels sink, which lands them on an unknown island which houses curses and evil.

Now on an uninhabited island with underground caves, a mysterious trap gets opened, and the dead now becomes the undead, and these zombie type creatures start – killing, infecting and biting the shipwrecked survivors turning them into zombiefied battlers.

Now there is a race against time for survival; the two opposing crews must rely on the intelligence of Jane Harper who struggles to maintain sanity over the opposing groups while staying safe against inclement weather, zombies, vampires and the starving animals who want them dead.

The Sentinel is available for $14.99 in Paperback form, or if you have an Amazon Kindle or E-Reader Device you will be pleased to know that an electronic form of The Sentinel is only $3.99. My ratings and suggestions are below.

[amzn_product_inline asin=’1611099064′]

 

Reviewer: Dark Goddess
Date: 07/16/2012
Rating: 10/10
Suggestion: Paperback: Buy
Suggestion: E-Book: Buy

Filed Under: Horror Books, Zombie Tagged With: bishop, undead, vampires, vikings

Quarantine 2: Terminal Review

June 23, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

Quarantine 2 - Terminal Cover PosterMovie: Quarantine 2: Terminal
Year: 2011
Studio: RCR Media Group
Director: John Pogue
Stars: Mercedes Masohn, Josh Cooke, Bre Blair
Language: English
Length: 86 Minutes
Sub-Genre: Zombies

Buy Movie

Plot: When a virus that turns its victims into crazed killers infects travelers on an airplane, authorities seal off the jet to let the virus run its course. Realizing they’ve been left to die, a flight attendant and a passenger plan a daring escape.

Review: What a whirlwind of a surprise Quarantine 2: Terminal is. If you seen the original movie, or the Spanish films, Rec or Rec 2, which this movie is based upon, you would think you are getting a sloppy handheld smorgasbord of chopped of heads and spiraling camerawork. Quite the opposite with Quarantine 2, this is a professionally shot film with a 180 degree turnabout from the Rec films. High praise goes out to the filmmakers for not following the norm and changing up the story dramatically.

This thrilling sequel even features some notable horror stars including the beautiful Mercedes Masohn from Red Sands and the new TV series 666 Park Avenue, Phillip DeVona from Premonition, Julie Gribble from ChromeSkull: Laid To Rest 2 and Lynn Cole from 2005’s Dark Remains.

A little more on the story; airline passengers are stuck in flight when the virus outbreak unfolds this time around. With small quarters and nowhere to run, the stewardesses, crew and travelers must defend against these ravaging, zombie-esque infected, that want nothing more than to eat flesh. The plane is able to land, but only to succumb to an isolated airport hangar, where the remaining survivors get trapped by local authorities, so the virus doesn’t spread to the mass population.

I am still shocked, even while writing this review, that Quarantine 2 turned out so extremely scary, terrifying and brilliantly crafted. There are many neck and face chomping scenes, startling and loud music, zombie charging effects, and tons of gory parts. The story flowed nicely with very little downtime, which keeps you engaged in its entirety. The makeup effects were another huge positive, along with the acting, which was way above par.

Quarantine 2: Terminal is available in retail stores and many online outlets too. Sad to say there is no BluRay for this smart little zombie film, but it has been reported that one is to come down the road. With approximately a $4 million dollar budget, and a straight to DVD campaign, I have a feeling this movie might get overlooked by the mainstream. I am here to tell you, do not hesitate, grab Quarantine 2 today, you will not be disappointed.

On a side note; Quarantine 2: Terminal was my personal favorite zombie film of 2011. I even gave it a nod on Grisly Zone 013: Top 10 Horror Movies Of 2011 And Predictions For 2012. That is a must-watch episode of Grisly Zone that countdowns the best horror films of the previous year.

Reviewer: BillChete
Date: 06/23/2012
Rating: 7½/10
Recommendation: Buy Movie
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Walmart
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: Facebook

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews, Zombie Tagged With: avenue, blair, bre, chromeskull, cole, cooke, dark, devona, gribble, group, handheld, john, josh, julie, laid, lynn, masohn, media, mercedes, park, phillip, pogue, prmonition, quarantine, rcr, rec, red, remains, rest, sands, series, spanish, terminal, tv, virus

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