Love Zombie Movies? These 10 Must-Watch Films Deliver the Best Thrills, Chills, and Laughs!

Shaun of the Dead - 2004 - poster

The funny thing about zombie apocalypses is that they usually look like absolute hell to live through, but it can be oddly fun to watch characters on screen surviving (or sometimes straight-up not surviving) one. Much of this has to do with the fact that zombies are – at least at the time of writing – purely fictional, and some of it has to do with the odd satisfaction one can get when thinking about what one would do if in the shoes of the characters.

Playing “How would I survive this” or “What would I do differently” can be fun, as can copious amounts of over-the-top blood and guts. Also, some zombie movies also happen to be comedies, so those inherently tend to be quite entertaining. What follows is not a list of the best zombie films ever, but some of the most purely enjoyable (and, as a warning, some of these also get quite dark, mixing entertainment and thrills with more somber and/or intense scenes, too).

10‘Dawn of the Dead’ (2004)

Directed by Zack Snyder

Michael Kelly fighting off zombies in 2004's Dawn of the DeadImage via Universal Pictures

While it gets pretty intense and even downbeat at times, 2004’s Dawn of the Dead is still a ton of fun for anyone with a decently strong stomach. It gets pretty brutal as far as zombie carnage goes, but much like the 1978 film it remakes (with a fair few narrative/structural differences), it’s also a blast as a piece of escapist entertainment, being darkly funny at times, too.

The thrill of a movie like Dawn of the Dead mostly comes from the premise, which sees a group of people hide out in a large shopping mall as a way to escape the hoards of zombies that have overrun the rest of society. There are numerous opportunities for kills and set pieces in such a setting, and it’s also one of those zombie movies you can watch and quite easily think, “Hmm, what would I do?”

9‘Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead’ (2006)

Directed by Lloyd Kaufman

Poultrygeist - 2006Image via Troma Entertainment

Packed with crude humor, ultra-violence, and lots of general grossness, Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead is a Troma film through and through. The studio is best known for The Toxic Avenger movies, but Poultrygeist is the best thing associated with the love-them-or-hate-them group (actually, Tromeo and Juliet is kind of great… well, great for something made by Troma).

You get out of this one exactly what you’d expect based on the title, as it’s a movie about trying to survive creatures that are zombie + chicken hybrids. Most of the humor in Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead is politically incorrect, the story is nonsensical, the effects crude, and everything’s intentionally schlocky and/or stupid, but all that is also what makes it a good deal of fun, at least if you’re someone who likes tasty B-grade trash.

8‘Zombieland’ (2009)

Directed by Ruben Fleischer

Emma Stone, Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg and Abigail Breslin in 'Zombieland'Image via Sony Pictures Releasing

Zombieland is a blast of a zombie flick, throwing together a small group of flawed but endearing characters as they try to survive and achieve some wonderfully simple goals, all within a runtime that clocks in at under 90 minutes. It’s not complex by any means, even by the standards of this kind of movie, but it does exactly what you’d want it to and then proceeds to waste none of your time.

It’s also a fun movie because while there are stakes, it never gets too heavy, and is generally kind to its characters regarding who survives (well, for the most part). It had a decent yet slightly underwhelming sequel, which is, naturally, a more recent release, but 2009’s Zombieland is the much stronger film and, oddly enough, feels younger.

7‘Re-Animator’ (1985)

Directed by Stuart Gordon

Jeffery Combs looking concerned in Re-AnimatorImage via Empire International Films

A movie that screams cult classic in the best of ways, Re-Animator is a bit like an updated version of Frankenstein, only with more humor, gore, and sleaze. Also, it can be classified as a zombie movie, considering how the attempts to reanimate dead tissue go wrong, though if you want to get more technical, no, the monsters here aren’t undead in a George A. Romero way, nor are they made zombie-like due to some kind of viral outbreak.

But what does matter is that Re-Animator is impressively gruesome in ways that still prove gross and shocking when watched today, about four decades later. Also, it’s just very well-made as far as comedic sci-fi/horror movies from the 1980s go, and the entertainment value is high enough to make it worth mentioning here, for present ranking purposes.

6’28 Days Later’ (2002)

Directed by Danny Boyle

Image of Cillian Murphy running in '28 Days Later' (2002)Image Via Searchlight Pictures

Supremely gritty, fast-paced, and continually intense, 28 Days Later has endured well in the 20+ years since it first came out, even if it felt wholly of its time, as an early 2000s release. It has an aesthetic and an overall unsettling vibe that makes it feel like a film reflective of its times, but since such negative feelings and global unease have hung around in the air ever since, maybe 28 Days Later is also unfortunately timeless.

Hey, it’s not all doom and gloom. 28 Days Later has some degree of hope in terms of what it has to say about the lengths one will go to in order to protect those they love, and survive themselves in trying times. It’s grim at times, but it is always occupying a space between exciting and terrifying, which, in its own way, is involving. At least you’ll never be bored watching this one, even on the occasions that it slows down a little to focus on characters bonding.

5‘Train to Busan’ (2016)

Directed by Yeon Sang-ho

Passengers on a train scrambling as a zombie virus breaks out in 'Train To Busan'Image via Next Entertainment World

Train to Busan is another zombie movie that’s entertaining while also being very intense; a comedy or light-hearted zombie film it ain’t. It’s about a zombie outbreak in Korea, following a group of people who try to survive such an event while on a train, hopeful that if they can reach their destination, they may effectively escape the impacted area.

Because everyone is always moving forward, the narrative is similarly always thundering ahead, and this contributes to Train to Busan being super effective as a thriller. It’s also very action-packed, as far as horror movies go, and the blend of genres here works really well. Other things about it narratively feel a little familiar, perhaps more so if you’ve seen many zombie movies before, but everything is mixed in a way – not to mention all with a level of polish – that ensures it’s captivating overall.

4‘The Return of the Living Dead’ (1985)

Directed by Dan O’Bannon

Zombie from Return of the Living DeadImage via Orion Pictures

In a similar way to Re-AnimatorThe Return of the Living Dead is gross, sleazy, and unapologetically gruesome, all the while also getting weird and dark alongside being silly. It has a title that makes it sound like it belongs to the Romero “Living Dead” series, but it really doesn’t, perhaps serving as more of a parody, or just something that takes some inspiration from those movies but twists it all in a different direction.

At its core, the premise of The Return of the Living Dead is simple and might sound familiar, what with the small-town setting, the slowly growing outbreak, and the numerous grisly death scenes, but there are definite surprises to be had along the way. All the most chaotic stuff is best left unspoiled, but what can be said is that this film more than earns the right to be called a cult classic; it borderline insists it should attain such a label.

3‘Dead Alive’ (1992)

Directed by Peter Jackson

Timothy-Blame-Dead-Alive-looking-terrifiedImage via WingNut Films

Call it Dead Alive if you want, or call it Braindead, or just call it “that very gruesome zombie movie that ends with a lawnmower hacking off dozens of limbs.” Whatever you pick of the above three options, zombie movie fans will probably know what you’re talking about. Hell, if you want, there’s actually a fourth pick: call it “That crazy B-movie Peter Jackson made a few years before he went to Middle-earth.”

Even if you go into this one knowing that it’s one of the goriest horror movies ever made, you might still be shocked by just how much blood ends up soaking every inch of this film, particularly by the end of it all. Thankfully, entertainment value and dark humor were also on Jackson’s mind when he made this, which means the film is just as fun as it is unapologetically gross.

2‘Shaun of the Dead’ (2004)

Directed by Edgar Wright

Simong Pegg, Nick Frost, and the rest of the cast pretend to be zombies in 'Shaun of the Dead' Nick Frost eats a Cornetto while sitting on the couch with Simon Pegg in 'Shaun of the Dead' Jessica Hynes as Yvonne in Shaun of the Dead Shaun tries to hold off a zombified Mary in Shaun of the Dead Shaun of the Dead Ed and Shaun sing White Lines Simong Pegg, Nick Frost, and the rest of the cast pretend to be zombies in 'Shaun of the Dead' Nick Frost eats a Cornetto while sitting on the couch with Simon Pegg in 'Shaun of the Dead' Jessica Hynes as Yvonne in Shaun of the Dead Shaun tries to hold off a zombified Mary in Shaun of the Dead Shaun of the Dead Ed and Shaun sing White Lines

Shaun of the Dead is perhaps the gold standard for parodying a movie genre while also being a great film within that same genre (actually, Hot Fuzz, too, which Edgar Wright also directed, and in which Simon Pegg and Nick Frost also starred). More than that, Shaun of the Dead does also qualify as a rom-com of sorts, and a movie about arrested development/taking control of one’s life while the world at large falls apart.

It balances many things across a fairly brief runtime, but everything comes together so well in Shaun of the Dead, and it proves immensely satisfying on multiple fronts. If it’s not the best zombie movie of all time, then it’s at least a contender, and it can quite comfortably be called the best horror/comedy zombie movie of all time; in that realm, it has little else quite on its level.

1‘Dawn of the Dead’ (1978)

Directed by George A. Romero

The zombies attack in an elevator in 'Dawn of the Dead'Image via United Film Distribution Company

As mentioned before, the 2004 version of Dawn of the Dead is very good, but the original Dawn of the Dead is absolutely untouchable. It’s not an all-out comedy, but there is some dark humor to be found within it, and there’s also a strong element of satire here which makes things more engaging than the film would otherwise be, if it was only focused on a story about survival.

But hey, that survival story told in Dawn of the Dead is also exciting, tense, and sometimes quite breezy/fun. It’s the zombie movie to end all zombie movies, and just about every zombie flick made since 1978 has been living in the shadow of this one. There’s spectacular carnage here, memorable characters, humor, heartbreak, and endless creativity. The film’s like the big shopping mall it’s set in, in the sense that it’s got everything.

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