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Richard Matheson's short story does get a very kinetic bit of treatment
by Hooper's often surreal direction here. The world in "Dance of the
Dead" is a world where even death isn't the end, and even the bodies of
the once living are used as entertainment in a world run by teenagers
who do nothing but get high and wreak havoc on the world. Robert Englund
has an especially serpentine-like walk-on role as a wicked DJ who runs
the show from behind the scenes and seeks personal finance by the misery
of others. "Dance of the Dead" can tend to be a twisted and gruesome
look at the post-apocalypse world.
It's pretty hard to think of a very good Hooper production after "Texas
Chainsaw Massacre" and "Poltergeist", because I'd say Hooper really
hasn't scored a slam dunk in a good long while. "Dance of the Dead"
is--again--no true exception. It's an installment I was really looking
forward to, and it was a colossal disappointment in spite of some
positive points it presented. If the "Masters of Horror" wasn't so hell
bent on exposing its symbolic storylines and allegories, and actually
tried to scare us, this could be an excellent series. Instead the show's
become nothing but a display of bravado from these top notch directors,
and the only truly good episode has been the pilot.
"Dance of the Dead" is a weak installment that really just tends to
ramble on and on. It's surprising that a story that's basically only
over fifty minutes is incredibly boring. And confusing. What actually
happened to the world to make it look the way it did, and why were kids
running the show? And were the people whom were deformed actual zombies
or just people who couldn't die? Regardless, "Dance of the Dead" lacked
any sense of compelling narrative with characters that really did
nothing much but get high throughout the episode especially in one
utterly ill-fated attempt at mimicking a drug high which looked a lot
like a shot from "Natural Born Killers". The directing was also often
very jarring with quick cuts, and choppy editing that was never truly
compelling or pleasing to look at.
"Dance of the Dead" attempts to convey some sort of message about the
after life and the apocalypse, but any sort of message is lost in the
translation with a boring story, jarring directing, and derivative
elements.
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