Juan of the Dead

(Redirected from Juan de los Muertos)

Juan of the Dead (Spanish: Juan de los Muertos) is a 2010 Spanish-Cuban zombie comedy film written and directed by Alejandro Brugués.[2] A Spanish-Cuban co-production between La Zanfoña Producciones (Spain) and Producciones de la 5ta Avenida (Cuba) involving the participation of the ICAIC, Canal Sur and Televisión Española, the film won the Goya Award for Best Spanish Language Foreign Film in 2012.

Juan of the Dead
Film poster
Directed byAlejandro Brugués
Written byAlejandro Brugués
Produced by
  • Gervasio Iglesias
  • Inti Herrera
Starring
CinematographyCarles Gusi
Edited byMercedes Cantero
Music bySergio Valdés
Release dates
  • 10 September 2011 (2011-09-10) (Toronto)
  • 14 October 2011 (2011-10-14) (Spain)
[1]
Running time
96 minutes
CountriesSpain
Cuba
LanguagesSpanish, English

Plot

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Juan, a lazy man in his forties, lives a carefree life in Cuba with his equally lazy and accident-prone sidekick, Lazaro. While out fishing, they accidentally catch what they believe to be a corpse. To their surprise, the "corpse" awakens and attacks them. Lazaro kills it with a spear gun, but they dismiss it as a strange incident. Juan and Lazaro engage in thuggish activities and associate with their questionable friends, including Lazaro's son Vladi California, drag queen La China, and China's lover Primo.

Unexplained acts of violence suddenly plague the city, with people attacking each other randomly. Juan suspects that capitalist dissidents are behind the chaos, not vampires or demons. Juan and Lazaro encounter reanimated bodies, leading Juan to start a business called "Juan of the Dead" where they kill and dispose of the zombified residents for a fee. However, their indoor missions result in high casualties and reveal their corrupt nature, straining Juan's relationship with his daughter, Camila.

A shady military group captures Juan's group and forces them into a truck, supposedly to recruit able-bodied men to fight the zombies. Chaos erupts when infected individuals reanimate, causing the truck to crash. Juan's group escapes, but China, who was bitten, dies and turns into a zombie while handcuffed to Juan. Camila and Vladi work to free Juan, eventually succeeding. With the increasing number of zombies, the group takes refuge on rooftops, relying on Vladi's solo food retrieval missions.

Desperate for safety, the dwindling group, consisting of Juan, Lazaro, Primo, Vladi, and Camila (who have become romantically involved), decides to head for the mountains. Their attempt to escape in a vehicle fails, forcing them to flee on foot while being pursued by hundreds of zombies. Seeking shelter in a bunker, they discover it is overrun, and Primo is killed. They find temporary safety in a parking garage suggested by a middle-aged man with a harpoon gun mounted on his truck, who hints at a religious solution but is accidentally killed by Lazaro.

Sheltering in the parking garage, Lazaro devises a plan to construct a flotation mechanism using oil drums and attach them to a convertible. Their goal is to drive through a group of zombies and reach the beach, where they plan to float to Florida in hopes of finding safety. Lazaro confesses that he was bitten earlier, but it turns out to be a harmless scratch. Juan and Lazaro fight off the zombies to create a path for the car. Juan rescues a crying child and brings him to the car. They build a ramp of bodies for the car to jump over the wall and make it into the water.

As they prepare to float to freedom, Juan surprises his companions by getting out of the car and heading back to shore. He believes he belongs in his homeland and plans to continue surviving. In an animated cartoon during the end credits, Juan is shown fighting through the zombie horde. Later, it is revealed that Camila, Lazaro, and Vladi have joined Juan in his fight against the undead.

Cast

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Release

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The film was first shown at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival.[1] Focus Features released the film on 14 August via iVOD and VOD, along with DVD and Blu-ray Disc.[3]

Reception

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Total Film gave the film three stars out of five, noting the film's "jaunty tone bristling uneasily with often unlikeable heroes" but praised its political context, stating that the film "resurrects the genre's political subtexts with jibes at a country where zombies are dismissed as 'dissidents' and public transport continues to run, no matter what."[4]

As of October 2020, the film has 83% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 23 reviews. The site's critics consensus reads, "Filled with wild splatter slapstick, Juan of the Dead also deftly uses its zombie premise as an undead Trojan horse for insightful political commentary."[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Sanchez, Danny. "tiff.net – 2011 Films – Juan of the Dead". Toronto International Film Festival. Canada. Archived from the original on 19 January 2012.
  2. ^ Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 97. ISBN 978-1908215017.
  3. ^ Barton, Steve (2012). Exclusive: Make a Date with Juan of the Dead. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  4. ^ Kinnear, Simon. "Juan of the Dead review". Total Film. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  5. ^ "Juan of the Dead". Rotten Tomatoes. 16 March 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
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