Planet Terror makes bad movies look good, and that's absolutely a compliment. From writer/director Robert Rodriguez comes the Grindhouse exploitation film Planet Terror. In this apocalyptic thriller a military experiment releases a zombie virus in a small town, forcing a rag-tag group of survivors to.

The intention with Planet Terror was to release both this film and Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof as a back-to-back double bill; two films in one. It's extremely hard to review a movie such as this. "Planet Terror" is Rodriguez's—the one-man filmmaking army behind the "Mariachi Trilogy," "From Dusk 'Till Dawn," and "Sin City"—contribution to the From the beginning of the movie, when we are introduced to the band of commando/zombies, led by a certain Die Hard legend, the movie is. Planet Terror is the more action-oriented half of Grindhouse.

Planet Terror

This parodies a B-movie tradition of casting a big name in a small part and then hyping them up as if they were the star. Note that Willis's character Muldoon rarely shares the frame with another actor, giving the impression that his shots. When a biological weapon is released into the air turning. Rodriguez's "Planet Terror" recycles the durable "Living Dead" formula: A band of the healthy fight off shuffling bands of zombies. I have written before about my weariness with zombies, who as characters are sadly limited. What distinguishes Rodriguez's picture is the extraordinary skill of the makeup.

Trailer Planet Terror

Click here if this is your business. Use the tools below to refine your search by only displaying reviews with a certain number of star ratings or to only show reviews from a certain time period. In Planet Terror, regular people, families and crime syndicates cross paths during a horrific night of.

Review by Morgan. this was the first movie i rented from the library when it opened again. it. Robert Rodriguez's Planet Terror is the first film of the Rodriguez/Tarantino double-feature homage. There are no reviews yet for this film. Telly addict Andrew Collins casts his critical eye over New Worlds (above), Klondike, The Trip to Italy, Endeavour and Monkey Planet.