Necropolis Awakened (Video 2002) Poster

(2002 Video)

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3/10
marred by LOUD acting
movieman_kev18 October 2005
Marred by atrocious LOUD hammy acting (especially by Duke White), this no budget zombie film about an evil corporation (and really are there any other kinds as far as films are concerned) that turns the small town of Skyhook into mindless ravenous zombies. If it was a little better acted (ok, you got me A lot better acted) this film would have been a nice little film. As it is though it's a forgettable little film that could have been more. It's a shame really, I had heard such great things about this film. My expectations were quickly and unmercifully shattered.

My Grade: D

DVD Extras: Commentary by Garret, Duke, & Brandon White; a 17 minute Making of; 25 minute Short film "Monster; 4 Deleted scenes; Stills Gallery; Bios; and Trailer

Gripes: On the DVD, if you go into the Deleted scenes menu you WILL NOT be able to go back, forcing you to turn off the DVD player
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10/10
now here is a fun movie
grungywout3 January 2004
Over the years i've seen alot of B-movies, but this doesn't even come close to a b-movie, this is something else. Most of you probably remember Peter Jacksons Bad Taste. I think you can compare Necropolis awakened with this flick. Just some guys making a horrormovie with as good as no resources. Okay, i must admit, Peter Jackson succeded in making most of the special fx believable, but hey, at least these guys are trying. Also the acting can be compared to Bad Taste: realy realy bad. Especialy the psycho, the moment he opened his mouth i crapped my pants.

In short: this is a fun campy movie that even never was suposed to be any good. And you can tell by looking at it that the makers must have had tons of fun making it.
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6/10
exciting b movie without all the rapid fire smarmy Tarantino inspired dialogue
j_swade18 July 2004
NECROPOLIS AWAKENED...Every once in a while a no budget movie comes my way that l just have to rave about! Made for around 7,000 bucks and shot on digital video, this is the best damn little zombie flick in years! A small town has become the experimental testing ground of the undead and their leader, Nefarious Thorne. The entire populace is either dead or part of Thorn's undead army and it's up to a lone survivor named Bob, to save the day and eliminate all the zombies. Too bad that Thorn has hired a trio of ruthless hit men who will do whatever takes to make sure that Bob doesn't leave town alive. The action is non stop from beginning to end with some of the coolest car chase scenes I have ever seen in a movie with this low of a budget. I hesitate in calling this flick a cross between MAD MAX and DAY OF THE DEAD only because it's really nothing like either of those films, it just felt that way while I was watching it. Now that I've got you so hyped up, let me bring you down just a little bit. The zombie make ups aren't that great and the acting sometimes gets a bit hammy....but get past that and you're in for a hell of a ride. Big kudos go out to the White family who made this picture for giving us an imaginative and exciting b movie without all the rapid fire smarmy Tarantino inspired dialogue and unnecessary cruelty that seems to run rampant in indie films these days. These guys have also made the first behind the scenes making of featurette that I have ever felt compelled to watch. Usually these things are just exercises in ego stroking and time killing (let's fill up the DVD just like the big boys do!) ,but I was extremely impressed on how they pulled off a lot of the crazy s*** seen in the movie.
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10/10
Unpredictable flick that's as low-budget as it is ambitious.
elmntr23 April 2003
Necropolis Awakened is now unleashed upon the world!

This isn't a zombie movie in the traditional sense of the word, this is something else entirely. What we have here is an original, over the top, zany, unpredictable flick that's as low-budget as it is ambitious. I promise you, you've never seen zombies that looked like these before.

The movie involves alcoholic Bob (Duke White), a gung-ho crazy who fights the zombie bad-guys, his nephew Tidan (Director Garrett White), three assassins led by the -have to see him to believe him- Judas (Duke White again)and Nefarious Thorn (Brandon White), who not only has one bad ass name, but is probably one of the most gleefully enjoyable bad-guys I've seen on screen in a long time, and there's also some guy named Coren Slogowski who plays just about everyone else.

Probably the best thing about this film is that it's a labor of love for all involved. It might not have the best acting or dialouge in the world (but it's impossible not to be amazed at what they pull off), but I'll be damned if this thing doesn't have enough soul to carry it a long ways. - Diabolical-Dominion.com
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10/10
The Source Magazine review
cloner18812 April 2003
Necropolis Awakened opens with a car chase through wide-open sage plateau country. Two cars full of white shirted henchmen are hot on the trail of our hero, Bob, the last sentient resident of the town of Skyhook. Just as Bob is within their grasp, one of the Assassins pulls a gun and fires on his own, sending their car careening into the dust.

What follows is a chronicle of Bob's effort to defeat the evil plans of Nefarious Thorne and his undead zombies. Thorne, the leader of a company called Neo-Genentrix, has chosen Skyhook for his evil experiment and only Bob and his nephew can stop them. The two remaining Assassins, after executing their traitorous partner, are hot on his trail.

Part of the delight of watching this flick had to do with knowing it was mader for under $7,500, but beyond that, I was surprised at just how good Necropolis Awakened was.

Sure, the plot if pretty standard zombie-flick fare, but what impressed me was the ambitious effort at details. A couple of action sequences are impressively staged and shot, particularly a rollicking free for all on an old Ford Pinto. Nefarious Thorne is truly creepy, as is the scene featuring the zombiefication of the traitor Assassin. I also loved how the filmmakers managed to use a lot of the cattle range equipment at their disposal ( squeeze chutes, hay barns and so forth. ) to create atmosphere.

The result is a pretty heroic effort. Necropolis Awakened packs a lot of jury-rigged ingenuity and ambition, as well as the odd rocket launcher, into it's 93 minutes.
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9/10
One word...Awesome!
sloth66628 October 2003
As i sat down with my dvd in the player with some popcorn and cola i pushed play on the controler all the sudden i was taken on a rollercaoster ride through the best b movie ive seen in my life. ive seen alot of cheese but this one takes the cake. i knew i had seen my fabv b movie when the wildeyed judas did his psycho laugh. if you like b movies like i did this is a keeper!
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10/10
Film Threat
blindsoldier37 December 2003
Not to make this all about me, but sometimes, when you're rummaging through the `box o'fun' sent to you by the Film Threat staff, you're never sure what you're going to get. `Necropolis Awakened' is a perfect example of this. I chose it because it had the word `Necropolis' in the title. Soon after I watched it, I found that everyone else in the world seems to have already discovered this indie zombie gem, leaving me completely out of the loop. Message boards I visited on a regular basis had info galore and praise singing out for this movie. So where the hell was I all this time? All of a sudden, the damn thing is everywhere!

`Necropolis Awakened' is a $10,000 uber-feature shot on DV and spawned from the wilds of Oregon, produced by a trio of brothers. The script and high-octane direction are courtesy of Garrett White, with all other duties relegated to Brandon and (yes, I'm serious) Duke. These three guys pretty much encompass the entire movie, with the latter Whites each tackling a pair of roles and doing the quadruple production duty at the same time.

Since this is a low-budget horror movie, it of course involves zombies. Virtually all debut feature horror films are zombie movies, and that's one of the reasons America is so great. Everyone with a camcorder can go out and make a reasonably watchable zombie movie, and there are numerous ways to play with the 'zombies-take-over' scenario. And the Whites certainly have come up with a story that is both unique and cliché at the same time. I say 'cliché', but not in a bad way - you're still dealing with flesh-eating zombies, after-all, and you're pretty limited by the monsters' very natures. At least zombies come with their own shorthand for the audience, so there isn't too much to understand about how they work.

The small town of Skyhook has been chosen as the new site for the biochemical company Neo-Genentrix, which annoys most of the townsfolk, including their resident alcoholic war-hero, Bob, particularly when he realizes that the town is now filled with the lumbering, rotting undead. When he starts making trouble for the company, particularly their CEO - a surprisingly nasty-looking Clive Barker-esque persona named (yes, I'm serious) Nefarious Thorne - Neo-Genetrix hires a trio of assassins to take Bob out. Um, yeah, I'm not sure why zombies need human hitmen to take out one lone human either, particularly when there are different classes of zombies - including `Proletariat' - capable of speech and increased movement. But after a while, I stopped asking questions.

The movie starts with a high-speed car chase, which is pretty darned impressive in and of itself, and the Whites must have thought so too, as it goes on for about ten minutes. Which is the biggest problem with the movie. Plot holes and hit-or-miss acting aside, the moviemakers' most grievous miscalculation is that it's just too long. There are a great number of very impressive set pieces, the car chase just one of the outstanding examples of camera-work, suspense, and high-energy filmmaking. But every single sequence could have been trimmed to flow much better. You can't fault these guys for the coverage, and it's strange to even complain about `too much' action, but it does tend to drag things down, as oxymoronic as that may seem.

It would be easy, again, to pick on the script and the acting, but that comes with the indie territory. Garrett's strengths are obviously in directing, composing and staging of action. And the Oregon scenery is used to a great effect. But he'd be well advised to work with, at least, a co-screenwriter in the future, someone who can tighten dialogue and limit his use of flashbacks - I was getting lost left and right in the story in terms of past or present. The strangest phenomenon to occur in `Necropolis Awakened' deals with Mr. Duke White, who proves to be both the best and worst actor in the movie. As `Bob', he's terrific and comes off tough and heroic; as the villainous `Judas', he's over-the-top and snarling, his face contorted like he's trying to pass a tractor.

Overall, the brothers do well with their limited budget, and manage to squeeze a lot of value out of their $10,000. It will most likely end up with a cadre of cultish fans, but it was sort-of designed to be a cult movie anyway. Faults aside, it's pretty impressive as a whole. If you're a fan of zombie movies, you'll find yourself a new favorite movie here.
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Beautiful videography.
stark_phillip19 May 2003
Anyone interested in making DV films need to see Necropolis Awakened. This movie is not video trying to imitate film; instead, it's pure veneration towards all that video has become and should be: a new art form. Masterful video lighting is complimented by shots that, due to the atributes of video, could not be achieved with film; and actually, I think that they would not WANT to be achieved with film. VIVA El VIDEO!
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