Zombie Planet Explained

Director:George Bonilla
Producer:Russell Coy II
Tammy Bonilla
Douglas Campbell
Xyliena Praetor
Screenplay:George Bonilla
Starring:Frank Farhat
Christopher Rose
Matt Perry
Rebecca Minton
Karl Gustav Lindstrom
Music:Klevin Scott
Cinematography:Billy W. Blackwell
Todd Burrows
Jon Shelton
Roy M. White
Editing:Sven Granlund
Matthew Perry
Studio:ZP Productions
Distributor:Tempe Entertainment
Runtime:119 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Zombie Planet is a 2004 American horror film directed and written by George Bonilla. Frank Farhat stars as a zombie hunter in a post-apocalyptic world. The film also stars Christopher Rose, Matt Perry, Rebecca Minton, and Karl Gustav Lindstrom.

Premise

After a pharmaceutical company develops a new wonder drug, its customers turn into zombies. T. K. Kane, a mysterious outsider, arrives in a community terrorized by local warlord Adam. Kane protects the community and hunts down the zombies plaguing the community.

Cast

Production

Director George Bonilla was inspired to make a zombie film after moving to Kentucky and finding a supportive independent film community there. Bonilla believed that zombies created from a defective drug would allow for a wide variety of effects on people, and allowed him to write in both feral and intelligent zombies. The cast and crew were mainly made up of people with no experience in filmmaking.[1] Scenes were shot at the Bluegrass Aspendale housing project in Lexington, Kentucky. Bonilla's wife Tammy is the executive producer.[2]

Release

Zombie Planet was distributed by J. R. Bookwalter's Tempe Entertainment.[3] It was released on DVD on October 19, 2004.

Reception

Peter Dendle called the film "epically awful" and embarrassing for Lexington natives.[4] David Johnson of DVD Verdict said that the film is better than most Z movies, but its length leads to too much filler.[5] Bill Gibron of DVD Talk rated the film 3/5 stars and said that "there are kernels of creativity and outright cleverness in this big, sloppy ersatz-spectacle."[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George Bonilla: The Late, Great "Zombie Planet" Earth. Watt. Mike. Film Threat. 2005-01-19. 2019-01-26.
  2. News: Filmmaker Shoots Horror Film in Lexington. 10. Middlesboro Daily News. Associated Press. 2001-11-19. 2013-11-30.
  3. Web site: George Bonilla: The Late, Great "Zombie Planet" Earth, Part 2. Watt. Mike. Film Threat. 2005-01-19. 2013-11-30.
  4. Book: Dendle, Peter. Zombie Movie Encyclopedia: 2000-2010. Peter Dendle. McFarland Publishing. 2012. 9780786492886.
  5. Web site: Zombie Planet. Johnson. David. DVD Verdict. 2004-11-11. 2013-11-30. 2004-11-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20041112085520/http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/zombieplanet.php.
  6. Web site: Zombie Planet. Gibron. Bill. DVD Talk. 2004-10-28. 2013-11-30.