Dead Before Dawn (also known as Dead Before Dawn 3D) is a 2012 Canadian adventure-horror comedy directed by April Mullen, written by Tim Doiron, and starring Devon Bostick, Martha MacIsaac, and Christopher Lloyd. It introduces "zemons", a combination of zombie and demon.[2] It is Canada's first stereoscopic live-action 3D feature film,[3] and Mullen is the first woman to direct a live-action, fully stereoscopic 3D feature film.[4]

Dead Before Dawn 3D
Film poster
Directed byApril Mullen
Written byTim Doiron
Produced by
  • April Mullen
  • Tim Doiron
Starring
CinematographyDaniel Grant
Edited byLuke Higinson
Music byJames Robertson
Production
company
WANGO Films
Distributed byGaiam Vivendi (US)
Release date
  • October 11, 2012 (2012-10-11)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Box office$608,881.00 (Russia)[1]

Plot

edit

Casper Galloway, an overcautious boy, has become afraid of anything dangerous since the day his father died in an accident at the Occult Barn, his grandfather Horus's shop. When Horus receives a lifetime achievement award, Casper mans the shop so Horus can collect the trophy. Horus warns "no one is to come within spitting distance" of an urn kept on a high shelf topped with a skull. Horus goes on to explain that Casper's great grandfather Gilbert Galloway imprisoned a malevolent spirit inside the urn and it will curse the person that lets it out.

Charlotte, the girl Casper has a crush on, visits and he tries impressing her with a free purchase for loyal patronage to the Occult Barn. However, more of their friends arrive and make the situation worse. Casper takes down the urn to show off to Charlotte and clumsily drops it. Casper tries warning them of the danger, but they laugh at him, thinking him to be paranoid. Skeptical, they invent a curse of their own: anyone with whom they make eye contact with after 10pm (since midnight is cliche) will kill themselves and come back as a "zemon", a zombie possessed by the evil demonic spirit entrapped in the urn. The zemons spread their infection through hickeys rather than bites, and those infected kill themselves and become zemons. As an additional rule, if someone gives a zemon a French kiss, the zemon will become their slave. They are given until morning to undo the curse, or else they're cursed for eternity. However, they neglect to come up with an easier way to break the curse.

When Casper spends the entire evening preparing for the curse, his concerned mother believes him to be on drugs. Once 10 o'clock comes, Casper decides the curse is fake, makes eye-contact with his mother, and explains something happened at the Occult Barn, ending her worries. At a football game, players and cheerleaders begin killing themselves, and Casper and his friends realize the curse they made up has come true. Casper finds his mother dropped a toaster into the bathtub with her, and he flees when she comes back a zemon. Luckily, she's hit by a car, but Casper accidentally makes eye-contact with a passenger, forcing him to run again. He bumps into his best friend Becky, whose boyfriend had turned into a zemon earlier that night, and she says she now believes that the curse is coming true and that Casper was right. The two of them realize that the others are still at the football game and rush to their rescue. Once they arrive, Casper and Becky see the field covered with the bodies of the game's attendees and their friends are the only ones standing. The zemons awaken shortly after and chase down the group. They track down Casper's friend Seth, another member of the gang, to warn him about the curse. Seth, who had ignored the curse, reveals to the others that he had made eye-contact with everyone he met that night, thus speeding things up. The zemons manage to catch up to the group and attempt to attack them in Seth's house, but Casper and his friends escape in Seth's Winnebago.

Everyone plans to search the Occult Barn's books for the way to break the curse. Horus returns, horrified to learn of the idiocy that occurred in his absence. Before he can explain how to undo the curse, he succumbs to it and jams his trophy into his skull; however, he tells them they have to dig. They retrieve the items needed to seal the spirit again: the ashes from the previous urn (which Casper had stored in his backpack), a human skull (one of which, according to Dazzle, is in the anthropology classroom at their college), a heart (which they dissect from a toad), an urn (later replaced by one of Seth's mugs after Dazzle succumbs to the zemon curse and breaks it), and the watch belonging to Horus's father (which they have to get out of his grave). However, most of the group is killed by the zemons along the way (or in Seth's case, gets knocked unconscious), leaving only Casper and Charlotte. A final line in the instructions reveals that Casper must give his life to undo the curse. He sets off a grenade, ready to die, but instead time rewinds to the moment right before the urn broke; everyone retains memory of what happened, ensuring they don't cause another curse.

When Casper and Charlotte graduate, they visit Horus and explain that they wish to become Occult Barn employees to pay for their new place. Overjoyed, Horus decides to take his first vacation ever; his attire suggests, he is going to Hawaii. After he leaves, the couple make out and accidentally knock down the urn. Horrified, they state, "We're so dead."

Cast

edit

Production

edit

The film was shot entirely stereoscopic 3D[3] in 20 days in and around the Niagara Falls region of Canada in 2011. For their environmentally friendly practices, the film was awarded the Green Screen Award by Planet in Focus.[5] April Mullen used a new, immersive approach to the 3D found in the film. WANGO Films focused heavily on 3D throughout the conception of the idea; writing the script, choosing the locations, deciding blocking, designing the shots and makeup all with the 3D in mind.[2] The film was shot on two Red One cameras.[citation needed]

Release

edit

The film has sold internationally[6] and Gaiam Vivendi picked up all rights in the United States.[7] The film premiered in North America at the Tiff Next Wave Film Festival.[8] It was released to Canadian theaters and on video on demand 2 August 2013, and it was theatrically released in America on 6 September 2013.[9] It was released on home video 1 October 2013.[10]

Reception

edit

Lauren Taylor of Bloody Disgusting rated it 1.5/5 stars and wrote that the film has "moments of hilarity" but is "more concept than substance."[11] Anthony Arrigo of Dread Central rated it 2/5 stars and wrote, "Dead Before Dawn makes a commendable effort to introduce something new to the world of zombies, but those fresh concepts quickly lose their luster under the weight of a nonsensical script and hackneyed characters that will hold little value to audiences."[12] Gary Goldstein of the Los Angeles Times called it a "grade-Z horror comedy" that "makes the Scary Movie spoofs look positively brainy."[13] HorrorNews.net called it "a fresh perspective on a popular horror theme".[14] Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter stated that "the broad, sophomoric gags generate few if any real laughs".[15]

Awards

edit

The film won the Perron Crystal Award[16] while in Belgium for Best Live Action 3D feature film. The award was given by the Stereo Media Film Festival in conjunction with the International 3D Society.[17]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Dead Before Dawn 3D" BoxOfficeMojo.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b "DEAD BEFORE DAWN" DIRECTOR TALKS 3D “ZEMONS” Archived 2012-10-04 at the Wayback Machine Fangoria. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Zemons Possess Entire Town In ‘Dead Before Dawn 3D’ Trailer Premiere!" Bloody-Disgusting.com. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  4. ^ "U.S. dawn for Canuck indie ‘Dead’" Variety. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  5. ^ Hutton, Richard (26 November 2013). "Green award for Dead Before Dawn". NiagaraThisWeek.com. Metroland Media. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  6. ^ "Berlin 2012: KSM Acquires 'Dead Before Dawn 3D' for UK and Germany" The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  7. ^ "Toronto 2012: Gaiam Vivendi Takes 'Dead Before Dawn 3D' for U.S. Market" The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  8. ^ "TFS Festival Quickie: April Mullen and Tim Doiron, Dead Before Dawn 3D" Archived 2017-10-03 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Film Scene. Retrieved 30 May 2013
  9. ^ Dickson, Evan (4 June 2013). "Now You Know Which Dawn You'll Be Dead Before With These 'Dead Before Dawn' Release Dates!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  10. ^ Miska, Brad (9 September 2013). "'Dead Before Dawn' Dated For Home Video". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  11. ^ Taylor, Lauren (30 September 2013). "[BD Review] 'Dead Before Dawn' Is More Concept Than Substance". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  12. ^ Arrigo, Anthony (17 October 2013). "Dead Before Dawn (Blu-ray / DVD)". Dread Central. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  13. ^ Goldstein, Gary (5 September 2013). "Review: 'Dead Before Dawn 3D' lunges at comedy and misses". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  14. ^ "Interview: Tim Doiron | April Mullen (Dead Before Dawn 3D)" Horror News. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  15. ^ Scheck, Frank (6 September 2013). "Dead Before Dawn 3D: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  16. ^ "Falls filmmakers pick up awards" Niagara This Week. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  17. ^ "LUMIÈRE STATUETTES AWARDED DURING 3DSTEREOMEDIA" Archived 2019-02-19 at the Wayback Machine StereoscopyNews. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
edit