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I Walked with a Zombie / The Body Snatcher
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Features
 Black & White
 Closed-captioned
 DVD-Video
 Subtitled
 NTSC

In Theaters : 30 April, 1943
DVD Release : 04 October, 2005
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I Walked with a Zombie / The Body Snatcher Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥ Two fantastic movie together
"I Walked with a Zombie" (1943) is the latest film I've seen in my attempt to review every zombie movie ever made. I am not reviewing this through the eyes of a film enthusiast trying to understand the brilliance of one of Val Lewton's masterpieces. Rather, I'm going to attempt to review the film more through the eyes of a person fanatically obsessed with all things "zombie" (though, that is not to imply that I am a merely a philistine). The story is of nurse, Betsy Connell, who was sent to a Caribbean island to help a plantation owner care for his catatonic wife. Add a couple of love triangles and some voodoo into the mix, and those are the ingredients for a great picture.

"I Walked with a Zombie" is an interesting conundrum for zombie fans. It is a more traditional zombie story, which ends up making it an unconventional zombie movie by modern standards. In the pre-Romero and pre-Ossorio era of zombie movies such as this one, the zombies usually stick close to their Haitian voodoo roots. They are either a loved one or brought back from the dead or a slave used to carry out mischievous deeds, as opposed to the infectious creatures out to eat brains. The zombies in this movie carry a double meaning. They are both the traditional Haitian "risen from the dead" zombies, but they also refer to people who are mentally comatose. Though I have a love for the modern zombie films, I have a deep appreciation for this older and more traditional version of the zombie story.

For a film made in the 1940's, there is not going to be a lot of the stereotypical things people look for in zombie movies. There is no bloody gore, and there is no blatant sexism of 70's nudity. At the same time, considering it was made in the 40's. the film is very risquA . Though "I Walked with a Zombie" is lacking in what many are used to in modern zombie movies, the film more than makes up for it by having something that many modern zombie films lack: great dialog, a compelling plot, and amazing direction. The conversation at the opening of the film between nurse Betsy and the plantation owner is probably some of the most brilliant dialog ever put in a film with "zombie" in a title. "Everything seems beautiful because you don't understand. Those flying fish, they're not leaping for joy, they're jumping in terror. Bigger fish want to eat them. That luminous water, it takes its gleam from millions of tiny dead bodies. The glitter of putrescence. There is no beauty here, only death and decay [...] Everything good dies here. Even the stars." A phenomenal speech that really sets the somber tone of the film.

Jacques Tourneur's direction was amazing. The scene when Betsy first encounters her patient is frightening. The scene when Betsy brings her patient to the voodoo ceremony is dreamy and memorable.

I believe there are two drawbacks to the movie. First is that the romance between the nurse and the plantation owner seems entirely tacked on. It really comes out of nowhere, and isn't supported by any of the scenes in the movie. At the same time, in the 40's they had to be very careful about the Production Code, and showing a married man romantically interested in another woman while he had a sick wife would have been difficult.

My second issue with the movie is debatable, as to whether it is a drawback. This is difficult to gage by a person watching a movie 65 years past it's time, but it seems like there is a certain level of (unintentional?) racism in the movie. This first hit me when an old islander is bringing Betsy to the plantation and is telling her about, "The enormous boat brought the long-ago fathers and the long-ago mothers of us all...chained to the bottom of the boat," to which Betsy replies, ""They brought you to a beautiful place, didn't they?" I cringed at that. It's like saying, "Sure, your ancestors were slaves taken from their homes, and most probably died on the boat over, but at least they were taken to a place with a beach and palm trees." It struck me as rather callous. Also, all of the island people seem to be stereotypically superstitious and "simple folks". On the other side of the argument I've read articles, and even seen a documentary by Martin Scorsese, that discuss how if "I Walked With A Zombie" is considered in the context of the early 1940's, that it is actually an anti-racist movie. Those articles talk about how even the mention of slave ships was a bold move in the 40's, and how Betsy's callous response would have been accurate for the character. The articles also have a very different take on the portrayal of island people than I did. They describe the movie's portrayal of the Caribbean people and their religious practice as "extraordinarily accurate" and "respectful", and "free of the racial stereotypes". It's is a complex issue of the film, and each viewer will have to form their own opinion. I know I change my opinion from day to day. If it means anything, the film was purportedly immensely popular with African American audiences when it was released.

Those issues aside, I find this to be a thoroughly enjoyable movie and give "I Walked with a Zombie" a 8/10 on my zombie movie rating scale. Though many zombie fanatics may be put-off by the more traditional take on the genre, I can't imagine anyone not being able to appreciate this movie. As a sign of a truly good zombie film, it is a movie that has appeal for everyone, and not simply those who are zombie fanatics.

"The Body Snatcher" (1945): as a bonus, the movie is on the same DVD as Val Lewton and Robert Wise's adaptation of Robert Lewis Stevenson's "The Body Snatcher". "The Body Snatcher" is the story of a medical professor who hires a grave robber to keep supplying him with fresh corpses. The professor wants to get out of it, but the grave robber starts to black mail him, and carries things too far. It's a great film, and chance to see actor Boris Karloff do some fantastic work as the grave robber. Also, there's a rare scene of Karloff and Bela Lugosi going head to head. A movie definitely worth the time: 8/10.
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