Burial Ground (1980)
Dir:  Andrea Bianchi
Cast:  Karin Well, Gianlugi Chirizzi, Simone Mattioli,
Antonella Antinori, Roberto Caporali, Claudio Zucchet,
Peter Bark, Anna Valente, Raimondo Barbieri
Not Rated, Approx:  85 minutes
Media Blasters DVD
"When The Moon Turns
Red The Dead Shall Rise!"
Fast-Paced Zombie Chunk-blower Cuts Right to
the Good Stuff and the Result is Some Seriously
Deranged Carnage...
If you dig through the horror section of your local video store, you're most likely to find at least a few obscure Italian
horror movies that rip off George A. Romero's horror classic
Dawn of the Dead. I happened to scroll across Burial
Ground
and picked it up since it sounded like an interesting enough film, with the cover box promising "unspeakable,
explicit horror!" Its quite an odd little movie indeed; a zombie film with mucho splatter and a few unusual twists.
Directed with creepy style by Andrea Bianchi, the films plot consists of a daffy professor who invites a group of
people out to an old cemetary, hoping to show them a discovery he's stumbled onto. Little does he realize, he has
unleashed a herd of zombies from their graves and they're hungry for human flesh. After munching on him, the
invited guests make their appearances but it doesn't take long for them to find out the professors discovery and they
try their best to escape from the abandoned cemetary to avoid becoming a feast for the zombies.
There really isn't much plot or character development (the story is so simple that it doesn't matter), and I'm glad to
see that it cuts to the chase fast and doesn't pull out any stops. The zombie makeup makes the actors look as
creepy as possible and there's plenty of flesh munching to make any gorehound happy. I also got a kick out of the
quirky techno score in the background, which adds to the wackiness of the proceedings. Like
Nightmare City (an
enjoyably bad Italian film and excellent companion piece to this one), the film makes the zombies a little smarter this
time around as they even get to use some handy gardening tools throughout as they pick their victims off, which was
a fresh little idea.
The human characters remain an idiotic bunch that aren't at all smart when facing off zombies and keep making
serious mistakes as the movie progresses. The over-the-top dubbing made them quite funny to watch though. The
most bizarre and talked about themes in this film is regarding the perverse sub-plot involving a slutty mother and her
incestuous son (pictured above). The final moment (which I can't spoil) should make even a hardcore horror buff
squirm.

Since there are loads of Italian Romero ripoffs like this one, I can't complain too much about it. Bianchi does a
respectable job with the content, although the lighting in this film was absolutely terrible. Some scenes are so grainy
and dark that I had to turn up the brightness on my TV screen when viewing the film.
If you're looking for a serious plot or any intelligence, you might want to skip out on this one, but if you liked Lucio
Fulci's
Zombie and other cheesy, stomach-churning zombie films from Italy, this one is right up your alley.
Adam's Rating:

* * * *  out of 5

Adam Eshack  1/21/02