Make up your own sheep-related pun - ewe’ll love it, mutton to be ashamed of, ram-bunctious etc. If you only see one zombie sheep movie, you won’t have a lot of choice, but this certainly delivers all you could wish for.
Black Sheep (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:87
Fresh:62
Rotten:25
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: With an outrageous premise played completely straight, Black Sheep is a violent, grotesque, and very funny movie that takes B-movie lunacy to a delirious extreme.
Theatrical Release:Jun 22, 2007 Limited
Synopsis: This blood-soaked horror comedy is the story of Henry Oldfield (Nathan Meister), a New Zealander with an unfortunate phobia...of sheep. When Henry was a boy, his father was killed in a herding... This blood-soaked horror comedy is the story of Henry Oldfield (Nathan Meister), a New Zealander with an unfortunate phobia...of sheep. When Henry was a boy, his father was killed in a herding accident on the land, and Henry fled to the big city. Now, years later, he has returned to sell his half of the farm and--at the behest of his therapist--to face his fears. Meanwhile, Henry's sadistic older brother Angus (Peter Feeney) has taken over the family business, and become widely known for his controversial genetic experiments on the animals. When two animal activists release one of Angus's genetically-altered lambs, Henry's trip quickly turns into his worst nightmare, as the lamb's zombie-like bite turns sheep and people into vicious flesh-eaters. Henry joins forces with one of the animal activists (Danielle Mason), and together they try to escape the sheep and find an antidote for the virus. Director Jonathon King cleverly plays on the silliness of the normally docile, dimwitted lamb as terrifying monster, and his shots of the sheep swarming over the hills induce equal parts thrills and laughter. However, the storyline could perhaps have benefited from a bit less action, and a bit more plot, as the suspense and jokes begin to fizzle by the end. The excellent WETA WORKSHOP (known for its work on the LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy) delivers hilariously gory special effects. Faces are eaten off, humans throw their own limbs, and heads explode, culminating in a raucous bloodbath that will likely earn BLACK SHEEP cult status among the EVIL DEAD crowd. [More]
Starring: Nathan Meister, Danielle Mason, Peter Feeney, Tammy Davis
Starring: Nathan Meister, Danielle Mason, Peter Feeney, Tammy Davis
Director: Jonathan King
Director: Jonathan King
Screenwriter: Jonathan King
Producer: Philippa Campbell
Studio: IFC Films
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Reviews for Black Sheep
The only people who are likely to feel hard done by are vegetarians, farmers and those whose stomachs are weaker than their sense of humour.
The performances may be uneven, but the flawed characters are believable, the sheep surprisingly scary and the animal antics often laugh-out-loud funny.
Like its ovine stars, Black Sheep is none too smart, but will certainly coat you in its fluffy warmth and put an affectionate smile on your face. Lacks much real bite, mind.
Amid the blood, gore, shrieks and ovine freaks, there's plenty of novelty value in this original flock-horror fest, albeit little else.
The film is carried along by an abundance of enthusiastic energy that's tough to resist.
This lurid lunacy from New Zealand is a horror-humor cross-breed of animal lore and giddy gore.
Folks looking to pass 90 minutes with a comic horror movie in the vein of "Tremors" or "Shaun of the Dead" won 't need to feel -- heck, let 's just say it -- sheepish about buying a ticket.
Anyone lacking a taste for red meat will likely say bah to the one-joke juiciness of Black Sheep, but ovine enthusiasts will be licking their chops.
The main difference between this and other horror escapades is the sheep's wool mixed into its production of blood and guts.
A really solid horror comedy: beautifully shot, decently acted, fast moving and creative with the disembowelments. And it manages the weird feat of making a flock of sheep bounding across a meadow seem vaguely menacing.
For his first feature, the director has started with a simple joke -- the incongruity of sheep being threatening -- and embellished it wittily enough to keep us chuckling throughout.
The human characters in Black Sheep are nothing more than tired stereotypes... But the sheep are fabulous!
Stunning vistas of New Zealand's rolling countryside aren't enough to carry this lame 2006 horror spoof about a lab experiment gone awry.
The most gruesomely satisfying spectacle for hard-core environmentalists would be that of a group of foreign investors in the evil enterprise being gobbled up by a flock of rampaging sheep.
Latest News for Black Sheep
October 09, 2007:
RT on DVD: 28 Weeks Later, Reign Over Me, and Surf's Up!
Horror fans are in luck, since a number of new DVD releases this week (28 Weeks Later, Black Sheep) offer critically acclaimed thrills and chills -- and we know how rarely that... More...
June 21, 2007:
Critical Consensus: "Evan Almighty" Is All Wet; "1408" Is Worth A Visit; Jolie Shines In "A Mighty Heart"
This week at the movies, we've got Steve Carell and Morgan Freeman in the big-budget Bible comedy "Evan Almighty"; John Cusack and Samuel L. Jackson in the haunted... More...
April 26, 2007:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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