Director: Andrea De Sica
Cast: Alice Pagani , Rocco Fasano , Silvia Calderoni , Fabrizio Ferracane , Giacomo Ferrara , Anita Caprioli , Sergio Albelli , Federico Ielapi , Esther Elisha , Kateryna Aresi , Marco Boriero
Plot: After Mirta dies of a drug overdose with her lover, she resuscitates alone and discovers she's part of a violent world she never knew existed.
My Movie Review: The movie is a good spin on the zombie genre it's so refreshing how come up with some elements that's cool to see despite so negative views I like their take with a style! This film reminded me of a mixture of Warm Bodies and The Corpse Bride but without the humor and this kind of movie with that swag rarely come by this days. It got straight to the point brining our title character back alive for a forever love with her boyfriend. The plot and cast both did excellent in portraying the story and I liked the overall tone. Gore and the way that the transformation were done were good, I'd like to see more unique raw take like this in the future! Don't Kill Me is a nice surprise love how clever it is in creating a world that we long to exists I thought it was a creative movie, very interesting and written well and it plays with the emotions a little but well done such a great movie although I don't remember the latter part, don't know how it ends otherwise its cool to show imaginations run wild create an exhilarating experience:) It's your average stylish, film noir-esque bad romance zombie flick. It succeeds at some of these elements & in some ways it does it quite well. Don't Kill Me doesn't only usher in a new era of zombie horror; it's a blockbuster special effects and power performance from the two leads level up the stakes in staying alive and keeping focus mind on what's happening to them!
Critics Reviews: Don’t Kill Me is two things at once and only really sure of a portion of itself. It’s a tragedy that can’t give up its romanticism and it’s a thriller that doesn’t fully deliver on its action’s potential. It's more style than substance, and the style isn't enough to carry the action. Rotten score. Don’t Kill Me can’t freshen a stale concept. Don’t Kill Me begins with a halfway-decent vamp-zomb hybrid concept, but soon becomes chronically infested with go-nowhere world-building that turns the movie into a collection of half-realized episodes teasing Stuff To Be Explored In A Sequel. And a lot of that is the ABC gum of screenplays: Long-standing battle between secret factions of humans and post-humans, the veteran unreadier showing the newb the ropes, unresolved romantic yearnings, etc. It’s as predictable as it is nonsensical, the latter mostly because it leaves plot strands to dangle, ostensibly confident that they will be picked back up in the next movie. It plays like a TV pilot that didn’t get picked up. De Sica shows enough visual acumen here to render the film a viable genre exercise, but he fumbles a climactic action sequence in which Mirta discovers the full extent of her violent capabilities. His work teeters on the edge of being something good, but it never achieves anything beyond a nice shot here or a savvy cut there – brief flashes of promise. He’s ultimately hamstrung by this fragmented screenplay, which shows little interest in being a standalone story. There’s a fine line between hopeful and delusional and Don’t Kill Me shows-- 49/51 balance between the two!
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