It took 7 years (in Tibet) to get World War Z completed, after Brad Pitt's Plan B Entertainment secured the rights to the film back in 2007. To this date, WWZ is the largest opening weekend Brad Pitt starring film. A high octane fanboy zombie flick, World War Z is based on the Max Brooks novel about a former United Nations investigator (Brad Pitt) who is thwarted back on the job, on a quest to find a cure to the zombie pandemic that is threatening the world. Pitt's character is driven by the family he must leave behind when he shifts from country-to-country to find an antidote. Director Marc Forster (Quantum of Solace, Machine Gun Preacher) utilizes a heavily-shaky camera during the shocking zombie attack scenes, producing high anxiety that, even I, wasn't prepared for. The World War Zombies are fast - faster than Forrest Gump - and there's no time to check your swatch watch while you wait for the undead to consume your flesh. The turn time is also accelerated. The Z's turn from undead to human in about 10.1.
Though this film had a massive $190M budget, stars one of the biggest faces in show biz, and was filmed in several different countries, World War Z somehow feels like a smaller, large-scale zombie action/part '80s horror movie. The script was rewritten during production to give the film a completely different third act than had originally been planned, making the ending more hopeful for viewers (i.e. a Hollywood ending). But although the ending was safe, I was surprisingly pleased with the pacing and high tension of World War Z. Per the film's success, Paramount has already announced that they will move ahead with a sequel.
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