This review may contain spoilers
A zombie movie hasn't felt as emotional as this making me scream at the TV. I'm glad it focuses on the family aspect and how it affects your relationship with others.ML became paranoid of the outside emotionally abusing his wife and sons to make sure they stays in place resulting in kidnapping when the older son does go out for a valid reason. He couldn't put aside his PTSD and his wife's affair. He was very manipulative
The older son I connected with him from the start protecting his younger brother, unfairly treated by the dad as he wasn't biological child of his. He had to mature fast.
I cried for Lucas as his life got turned upside down and had to have his arm cut off so he dosen't turn into a zombie.
I loved how the zombie kept repeating their last words
Was this review helpful to you?
This review may contain spoilers
The zombies aren't to be feared.......
as much as the monster, the father. Outside is a movie based on a family's struggle, the decline of said family, and death of, against the backdrop of a zombie outbreak.The father's childhood trauma, and subsequent c-PTSD, and his knowledge of his wife's infideliity with his older brother, which resulted in his oldest "son' being born, is the core of the storyline.
His wife is the mother to 2 sons, the latter of which, is the father's biological son. The wife warily navigates her husband's animosity towards her. At one point, early on, they have a *short moment of lust* for one another, then the angst resumes.
By just over the halfway point in the movie, the father has already sabotaged his family thrice. Deliberately withholding info and lying about said info, and burning a map his brother had left with him of the possible Camp the wife and oldest son had mentioned earlier. When that 'scene' during the Christmas dinner is shown the viewer knows the father has completely lost all reasoning and is on the edge of madness.
The movie is about the family. Their relationships with one another. It isn't about the zombies. The family's failed struggle IS the basis of Outside. The movie could have survived without the zombie outbreak as a plot/plots. I wouldn't recommend this to anyone unless they're into intense family dynamics that aren't resolved except by death.
ps. The focus on the father's 'item' from his father was especially poignant. Time, for the father, once he was back in his childhood home, had stood still.
pss. The zombies shown on screen were much better portrayed than the movie poster, and yes, they can talk. Their utterances rasped with their concerns or fears in their zombie state.
Was this review helpful to you?
This review may contain spoilers
I dropped it
Absolutely hated it, it was heavily focused on the family which yes I understand they are the main characters of the movie but I was expecting a different sort a film. It focused on the families issues especially between the married couple, straight out the gate you can tell the married couple hate each other and you don't see what happened to them before they reach the husbands family home when they escaped wherever they just escape from when the zombie out break happened. This announcing issue between the married couple continues to play out throughout the film before I dropped it. I really wanted to like this film due to the fact it's a zombie film from the Philippines and I've never seen a zombie film from that country before. I was excited to to see what filming style they where going use how they would portray zombies in the Philippines, I found it so unique that the zombies could actually talk more like from what I'm guessing was their last words before turning into a zombie, but the film was solely focused on the tension between the married couple and their 2 sons. The husband is extremely traumatized over whats happening for good reason but he starts to become controlling and doesn't want to leave his childhood home despite the fact his own father physically, mentally, emotionally and probably verbally abused him growing up, which makes him absolutely terrified of the basement which we can assume as the audience his father would lock him up down their as a child, even though he has this server traumatic event that happened to him he refuses to leave and find somewhere else to go just in case they could find a better place to live especially for his two children. Both adults are extremely unlikeable especially when you find out they have been both cheating on each other and what makes things worse the wife cheated on her husband with her husbands brother and had his child. So it made the man playing the husband constantly treating his nephew who he is raising like his son like crap. I really disliked how he was towards his son/nephew because it wasn't his fault to who his father is but that didn't stop the man who that poor child thought was his dad treat him horribly, he was essentially sorta becoming like the man he hated his own father. The poor boy didn't know his uncle was his dad but you could tell he started suspecting when his younger brother mentioned that he looked liked their uncle when he was younger when they both were looking at his dads family album. I stopped watching when they uncle appeared not because he showed up just because I had already mentally checked out of the film. I was really hoping to see more zombies & action but right before I dropped it there wasn't that much and it probably picked up after the uncle arrived but I just stopped caring when they family went to the bridge to give it a try to leave and find somewhere else to go and the wife almost go everyone killed.Was this review helpful to you?
Et si le mal venait de l'intérieur ?
Outside est un film franchement divertissant et jouant avec la tension. Il possède des décors naturels et beaux (notamment les interminables champs de canne à sucre), un casting excellent, un scénario surprenant et une musique parfaite (le dix est mérité).Carlo Ledesma nous dévoile une famille. Les parents qui semblent à peine se supporter, et leurs deux garçons qui sont, malgré eux, victimes d'une dynamique familiale pesante. Cette dernière va ne faire que s'intensifier au fil de l'histoire, tandis que les secrets se révèlent. Le film ne tente pas de nous les cacher, au contraire, c'est clair et intelligemment distillés. On suit l'histoire, on devine et on voit le chaos qui se renforce.
La psychologie des personnages est ce qui dynamisme l'histoire, car les zombies ne servent que de fond dans ce monde désolé. L'action se concentre majoritairement sur la famille, tandis qu'on découvre le passé et les traumatismes du père, ainsi que l'égoïsme de la mère.
Certaines scènes font mal au cœur, mais renforcent toujours plus la valeur humaine de ce film qui est bien plus qu'il n'y paraît. D'ailleurs, il me fait penser au film taïwanais « Eye of the Storm », sorti l'année dernière (il me semble). Boudé, parce qu'il avait l'étiquette du film pandémique, mais renfermant tellement plus. Outside est plus au moins similaire dans son idée. Encore des zombies ? Oui, mais le film va bien plus loin que ça... Certes, il n'est disponible que depuis hier, il n'a pas encore eu le temps de faire son chemin, mais sait-on jamais !
Bref, c'est un film divertissant qui s'amuse avec les nerfs des personnages, tandis qu'on réalise avec quelques sueurs froides que l'enfer n'est peut-être pas le putréfié qui traîne la patte dans l'ombre, mais ceux qui ont encore le cœur qui bat.
Was this review helpful to you?