Plaga zombie (Video 1997) Poster

(1997 Video)

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6/10
Very well done low budget zombie movie
The_Void5 October 2008
Low budget zombie films are very hit and miss; with the vast majority of being the latter. They don't require much thought to put together, can often be made with a very limited budget and are (presumably) very fun to film; and this means that there are a lot of very amateur examples; and after having seen a bunch of these amateur examples, its done a lot to put me off the genre. When I heard that this film was made in Argentina for a few hundred dollars, I really did fear the worst. But actually, to my greatest surprise, this is actually a very good attempt at the genre! The main influence was obviously Peter Jackson's Braindead, and indeed there are a few nods to it; although the story is just your average zombie stuff and the film clearly takes influence from across the genre. We focus on a house where a few friends, including a doctor, a mathematician and a wrestler, have to band together in order to survive when a strange disease starts turning their other friends into the living dead.

It's obvious that the filmmakers valued their special effects very highly, and indeed the second half of the film is basically just an excuse to show plenty of splatter. The effects themselves are not particularly convincing; but they are very impressive considering what the filmmakers had to work with. There are plenty of them too and the blood flows freely and often, which is nice. The first half of the movie is slightly more character and story based and the build up is actually quite good as the characters are established. It has to be said that the film goes downhill once we get towards the ending because then it's basically just a Braindead-style bloodbath. The film takes a humorous approach to the zombies, which was previously seen in films like Video Dead and (again) Braindead and to be honest I find that a bit of a turn off; but with a film with such a low budget as this, you can't really blame them for adding comedic elements. The ending is fairly decent and while this is not exactly classic horror; it's decent for an hour's entertainment and should appeal to zombie fans.
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4/10
D.I.Y. splatstick from Argentina.
BA_Harrison28 December 2016
Plaga Zombie is an extremely low budget splatstick flick clearly inspired by the early movies of Sam Raimi and Peter Jackson, with lots of inventive camera-work and an abundance of cheap and cheerful gore effects. Sadly, the weak plot, poor performances, pitiful humour and some of the crappiest looking zombies imaginable (I've seen better face painting at a school fete) prevent this one from from coming anywhere near to matching the brilliance of The Evil Dead and Bad Taste.

The film opens with evil aliens abducting a young man and infecting him with a zombie virus before returning him to Earth. As the plague spreads, wrestler John West (Berta Muñiz), medical student Bill Johnson (Pablo Parés) and mathematician Max Giggs (Hernán Sáez) are forced to take up arms against the living dead.

Considering the almost non-existent budget of approximately $120, I guess that all involved should be commended for actually delivering anything remotely resembling a coherent film, but the fact remains that, despite some bold direction and a few creative effects, the overall movie simply isn't that great. The 2001 sequel, Plaga zombie: Zona mutante would take the same splatstick approach, but would show improvements in most departments, making it a far more enjoyable watch.
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6/10
Incredibly fun if flawed low-budget zombie effort
kannibalcorpsegrinder4 February 2017
Bored with their slow lifestyle, two best friends in a small Argentine town find that a strange alien epidemic on their neighboring residents has unleashed a horde of zombies on the town and forces them to engage in a series of inventive tactics to stop them from spreading.

Considering its resources, this one turned out rather fun and enjoyable. One of the few positives to like here is the rather enjoyable and frantic pacing throughout here that basically charges this one along incredibly well. There's little time to waste here before the abduction encounter and the friends slowly undergoing their metamorphosis in their apartment, leading to the great scenes of the creatures running loose in the streets of the small town with the ever-increasing horde coming after them. There's some more fun to be had from their encounters throughout the house which make this one feel really fun with the initial brawling as well as the encounters in the basement or out in the hallways and corridors of the complex which makes for a truly fun low-budget style good time here with the film employing non-stop encounters with the creatures to give this the sort of frantic, frenzied encounters that take place throughout here which give it that fast-paced feel. That kicks in even more when it gets to their counter-attacks clearing the way against the zombies, which goes for the cheesy wrestling matches and comedic brawls that occur in the lobby of their apartment or outside in the streets which manage to continue on throughout this one so well that there's almost nothing to keep this one from slowing down and focusing on their battles with the creatures that are quite fun in here, giving this one the kind of crazy, over-the-top gore gags against the zombies that never belie their low-budget origins in execution even though the concept here is exceptionally fun and gruesome at times. These here really hold this one up even though there are some pretty noticeable flaws to be found here. As is most obvious about this one, that comes from it's incredibly low-budget nature which is quite small and really shows it's nature here with the exceptionally cheesy make-up and gore effects as well as the overall execution of the film's technical areas which are just so obviously minuscule that it becomes a source of the film to really get a handle on for this one. Everything looks home-made and cheap without going for any kind of realism, which makes for a somewhat troubling watch if looked at in terms of actual execution of what's going on, and while not a bad thing is something to contend with. Likewise, the film also manages to really undermine itself where it really doesn't seem too concerned with internal logic, having zombies go from mindless shuffling hordes that fail to understand things such as locked doors or stairs yet are seconds later able to engage in planned wrestling matches or continually pop up into the frame for a mugged goof shot that looks way too planned rather than anything else, resulting in a somewhat jarring tone that comes more from the amateurish production than anything else here. Otherwise, there's not a whole lot else to this one.

Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence.
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7/10
A great gore movie
german-611 October 2000
Plaga Zombie is a real underground cult classic. Its bloody, cheap and funny. Berta Muñiz is a very talented actor, and here he gives his best performance till now.

Watch it, and wait for the sequels.
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fun fun fun
lady_vader13 January 2000
My prediction is that it won't take long for 'Plaga Zombie' to become a cult movie. A wrestler, a Star Trek fan and a Medicine student fighting against a group of angry zombies, I guess that's something you don't see every day.

And, of course, lots of blood!
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2/10
A review from someone NOT from Argentina: If at first you don't succeed… (Skip this one and watch the sequel instead)
Death_to_Pan_and_Scan28 July 2006
I love zombie films, but am reminded far too often of how easy it is for people with no money and even less original ideas to churn out really bad ones. I was recently a one-day background zombie extra in a local low-budget zombie short film where my friend was helping with makeup, but I'm not expecting miracles when I see the final product. Here I will give you a review that isn't influenced by the reviewer being from the same country or even town as the filmmakers. It feels like some of the positive feedback seen on IMDb might be from people who know the filmmakers.

Wow. This is truly of the 'shot-on-video no-budget backyard zombie genre' (plus aliens). This feels like a home movie shot with friends who can't act and that's pretty much what it is. It's still better than "Dead Life", but then again what isn't? It wants to be something like Peter Jackson's "Braindead" (aka Dead Alive) with its gross out fluids and even a lawnmower joke, but the difference is that Peter Jackson had a well-made film with: a funny script, some evidence of a minor budget, people who could act, a crew who had an idea of how to make a film and something resembling a coherent narrative and story that kept your interest. This really has none of those ingredients. The guys behind Plaga Zombie may be fans of Jackson, Rodriguez and Raimi (three cultishly popular directors who've made horror films on small budgets), but in this film they didn't really exhibit a fraction of the talent or ingenuity of those directors. Their sequel was much better and hopefully in time they will improve and provide us fans with something worth watching more than once. I know this was made with no budget, but a good script doesn't take money, just creativity and an ability to write dialogue. This film is lacking a good script. Go watch Rodriguez's short film "Bedhead" to see what can be done with very little resources and a bit of ingenuity.

I tried watching Plaga Zombie once before and gave up halfway through and put my DVD back on the shelf with my other zombie movies. Months later I finally gave the sequel a chance and found it had some merits and decided to try watching this first film again to see where it started. Immature humor can be done well by filmmakers who can write a script well and get the right cast and crew behind them. The excessive amount of childish humor here might seem like really clever stuff if you're in the 7th grade and haven't bothered to discover better low budget films yet, otherwise you'll probably be disappointed. Plaga Zombie only looks a little better than those cheesy home movie short films M. Night Shyamalan made as a kid and sometimes puts on his dvds to show his humble origins.

STORY: Dr. Bill is a med school dropout; I suspect this is not because of the accident they mention, but because of his complete ineptitude to diagnose a patient. His roommate wakes up with his back covered in what appears to be a whole case of used bubblegum affixed to his back (remember never to fall asleep chewing gum!). Bill's buddy, an out of work wrestler, runs into the room asking him to help his former manager. It appears both have the same set of symptoms, which our genius would be doctor surmises is some disease that infects the body and then the mind. Brilliant work, doc! They eventually realize aliens have infected their friends and neighbors and there is some sort of zombie epidemic which they must try to survive.

DE-ANIMATION METHODS: Dr. Bill concocts an acid solution to be administered via syringe to the infected to kill the 'host organism' thereby producing a large volume of foam and fluids from the body of the zombie. Cue cheesy gross out effects.

MAKE-UP EFFECTS: various colors of face paint, some latex and lots of colorful fluids and what looks like cornflake/oatmeal and food coloring type effects. Ultra low-budget.

The story, what little there was of it, couldn't keep my attention. I can't really recommend you spend 68 minutes of your life watching this unless you want to learn from its mistakes for your own backyard movie. Go straight to sequel, do not pass go and do not spend any $$$ (luckily there's a US DVD that included this film as an extra to the sequel, because this isn't worth spending your money on). Better yet, go watch "Braindead" (aka Dead Alive).
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7/10
Cowboys NEVER go out of style!
Hey_Sweden1 October 2021
The Argentinian horror film "Plaga Zombie" entertainingly combines the alien invasion plot with a zombie epidemic plot: in this case, dastardly extraterrestrials infect select people with a virus, and then just wait for them to mutate and attack other humans. A trio gets together to tackle the problem: "doctor" Bill Johnson (Pablo Pares), mathematician Max Giggs (Hernan Saez), and wrestler John West (Berta Muniz).

With Saez and Pares also co-directing (and the three stars writing the screenplay), "Plaga Zombie" was filmed on a true micro-budget. (Apparently, the equivalent of less than $120.) And yet, it benefits from so much gonzo, glorious, go-for-broke Do It Yourself enthusiasm that it's impossible to resist. The bargain-basement gore is hilariously, wonderfully over the top. After a while, Saez, Pares, and Muniz just drop any pretense of telling a story to just concentrate on cartoonish, macabre mayhem. The second half is particularly amusing, with characters ending up with almost as many lives as nine cats.

The actors are good fun to watch, especially the upbeat, engaging Muniz as the brawny hero who declares that his feet & hands are his best weapons. The scores of extras playing zombies are very energetic, and this little film does have a pretty good pace, dropping us into the story proper with little preamble, and the running time is a brief and agreeable 69 minutes.

For those who don't shut this off once the end credits start rolling, there is a quick coda that is worth waiting for.

Seven out of 10.
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1/10
Horrible low budget zombie movie...
paul_haakonsen15 November 2022
I had heard about this 1997 movie before, by title only, but I have never had the opportunity to watch it. And as I stumbled upon it here late in 2022, of course I opted to watch it, given my interest in the zombie genre.

Well, "Plaga Zombie" was a difficult movie to sit through, so very, very difficult. It was a low budget zombie movie, which in itself doesn't have to be a bad thing. But trust me, in this case, it was.

The storyline in the movie, as written by writers Berta Muñiz, Pablo Parés and Hernán Sáez, fell completely short of entertaining me. The plot was just too childish and stupid. And the character gallery was rather laughable. And then there were the zombies, wow, just wow. Talk about laughably bad zombie make-up effects.

The acting performances in "Plaga Zombie" was wooden, rigid and very amateurish. Needless to say that I wasn't familiar with a single actor or actress on the cast list here. But it seemed that those participating in making the movie were having a blast.

This was a swing and a miss of a zombie movie. But at least now I can tick it off from my to-watch-list. And believe you me when I say that I am never returning to watch this movie again, nor am I going to waste my time on any of the 2001, 2011 or 2021 sequels.

My rating of directors Pablo Parés and Hernán Sáez's 1997 movie lands on a one out of ten stars.
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10/10
Terrific and diabolic thrill ride so everyone can´t miss
edgardo-55 March 2002
This film is the most fantastic horror thriller made in Argentina. The explicit blood and gore make up effects is so realistic than any Hollywood production. The plot and characters commemorate film like Sam Raimi´s Evil dead, Robert Rodriguez´s From dusk till dawn and Peter Jackson´s Dead alive. With no budget and a lot imagination, the creators made an excellent entertainment for all the independent horror lovers so everyone can´t miss.
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3/10
Plaga Zombie
BandSAboutMovies9 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Plaga Zombie was created by Pablo Parés and Hernán Sáez, who made the first version of the movie with a home video camera and some high school friends. At the age of 17, they worked with Berta Muñiz to make the first version of the movie that was released in theaters. The sequel, Plaga Zombie: Zona Mutante, have a higher budget - well, $3,000 versus a few hundred - but took a toll on the crew. Plaga Zombie: Zona Mutante - Revolución Tóxica, the last in the trilogy, was the result of the crew falling apart. Their grup therapist suggested they make the movie but as far as I've learned, they didn't remain friends.

But ah, Plaga Zombie, directed by Parés and Sáez, who wrote the film with Muñiz, is a magic time. Med student Bill Johnson (Parés), pro wrestler John West (Muñiz) and nerdy Max Giggs (Sáez) are trapped in a zombie outbreak caused by aliens. That's a simple description of what follows, as this is the best $120 ever spent.

This is 67 minutes that recall the best of Peter Jackson's early career - it's literally Bad Taste mixed with Dawn of the Dead - and this is just a start for the delirious insanity that the second film in the series will bring.
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10/10
Still, the best Argentinian gore film
matiastimm11 February 2001
It's been almost 4 years now, and no other movie appeared to dethrone 'Plaga Zombie' from being the best Argentinian gore film ever! Its splatter gory special FX are great, and its comedy is superb. The characters are very funny, and even though some details aren't entirely accurate, as the Internet sequence, the story's excellent! I can't wait to see Plaga Zombie 2!!!
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1/10
Gives New Meaning to the Word "Awful"
Uriah4324 March 2015
This movie begins with some aliens landing on Earth and infecting a person with a strange virus which quickly spreads and turns everybody into flesh-eating zombies. Soon only three people in a small area remain uninfected: A former professional wrestler named "John West" (Berta Muniz), a medical student by the name of "Bill Johnson" (Pablo Pares) and a mathematician named "Max Giggs" (Hernan Saez). Now rather than reveal any more of the story and risk ruining the film for those who haven't seen it I will just say that this was an ultra low-budget zom-com (zombie-comedy) which gives new meaning to the word "awful". It was really bad. The acting was pitiful, the humor non-existent and the plot involved one combat scene after another with hardly any variation in between. As a matter of fact, about the only good thing about this film was the ending--whereupon I felt truly free from the mindless drivel I had subjected myself to for over an hour. Having said that I strongly recommend that viewers avoid this movie at all costs because it is an hour and change and they will never get back.
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8/10
Lots of fun, lots of gore, with almost no budget
leirbag_p9 February 2009
If you take in account that most of the people involved in this film where in there 20's at the time, this is a major accomplishment. It's extra gory and very funny, and some special effects are amazingly well done. It's also worth mentioning that the total budget was U$S600 and it was shot with only one camera. Most of the editing (90% of it actually, according to their website) was done while filming, i.e. filming scene number 17 right after number 16. I could say that the story was under-developed, that the acting was flaky, etc... but once again: they were 20 years old!.

If I'm not mistaken, it's also the first Argentinian zombie film. Bound to become a cult classic.

Rating: 8/10
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10/10
The first Argentinian Gore Film
Matt-3844 January 2000
This movie really makes you wonder if all gore films are done with such a small budget, because most of them do not display such excellent FX. The story is hilarious, kind of like a combination of comedy and gore.

The Greatest Argentinian film to this day!
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10/10
Made by teens !! Impressive!!
waltererivero30 October 2021
First off for all you wanna be critics out here shelling out negative reviews , I'd love to see how you can make a film with no budget, and In your teens! With that being said this movie is fun , gory and original!!! Which spawned a trilogy and also a 4th installment!! VIVA PLAGA ZOMBIE!!!!!
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