Dead Alive | Telescope Film
Dead Alive

Dead Alive (Braindead)

Critic Rating

(read reviews)

User Rating

In this gory yet humorous horror flick, a young man must deal with his overbearing mother and her transformation into a zombie after being bitten by a Sumatran rat-monkey. As the outbreak spreads, he must navigate a series of increasingly absurd and gory situations in order to contain the zombie invasion.

Stream Dead Alive

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are critics saying?

78

Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov

The "Citizen Kane" of Oedipal zombie-cannibal-right to death-comedy-love stories... So gleefully over-the-top that it's decidedly hard not to gag while you're laughing yourself incontinent... Sick. Perverse. Brilliant.

75

Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman

A gonzo splatterfest from New Zealand that manages to stay breezy and good-natured even as you're watching heads get snapped off of spurting torsos.

70

Time

There is good, broad humor amid the very gross gore effects. And when the Living Impaired stalk our hero's home, it's a family reunion out of your bloodiest nightmares. [8 Feb 1993, p.83]

70

Variety by David Stratton

Technically, this is Jackson's best to date, with state of the art creature and gore effects by Richard Taylor and prosthetics design by Bob McCarron. There's any amount of dismemberment, disembowelling, beheading, and the like, all of it handled with bloody conviction.

60

TV Guide Magazine

An almost unrelenting barrage of gore, Dead Alive is also a constant assault on the funnybone, a film in which the graphic blood-spilling is taken so far over the top that it becomes hilarious instead of disgusting.

50

Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum

Ordinarily I don't care for this kind of thing at all, but something must be said for Jackson's endless reserves of giddy energy; perhaps because this is so clearly meant to be silly, he generally avoids the calculated mean-spiritedness of more prestigious directors like Spielberg and Renny Harlin.

20

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

Because all of this looks blatantly unreal, and because the timing of the shock effects is so haphazard, Dead Alive isn't especially scary or repulsive. Nor is it very funny. Long before it's over, the half-hour-plus bloodbath that is the climax of the film has become an interminable bore. [12 Feb 1993, p.C16]