No one can resist a good zombie movie. When done right, these tales about feral monsters and animalistic impulses have ways of asserting more humanity than many of the thousands of films put out each year. Zombie movies have a rhythmic road map: outbreak, meet the survivors, attack, hard loss, grandiose overture, and aftermath. They’re not hard to pin down, but check a lot of horror boxes, as there are countless sandbox opportunities for creative chaos and dramatic character growth. Screambox’s latest zombie endeavor, Uncontained, follows many of these beats but presents itself very differently from the gory survivor horror tales we’ve grown accustomed to. Writer-director-star Morley Nelson crafts a unique story in the genre that quickly establishes strong connections between the characters and the viewer and offers a fresh take on some long-standing tropes.
Uncontained begins with a zombie outbreak already in progress and two children living alone at the forest’s edge of a community. Nelson stars as Dan, an enigmatic drifter who seemingly appears to rise from his snowy grave to aid the young boy, Jack (Jack Nelson), and his even younger sister, Brooke (Brooke Nelson), through the zombie apocalypse version of the new normal. While his story has no zero-day event, Nelson considers the end of the world to be just business as usual. Sure, things are different, but his characters have readjusted to the status quo. Sort of the Covid equivalent of continuing to let the disease run rampant but heading back to work all the same. It’s not dissimilar to George Miller’s original Mad Max, where the world is coming to an end, but it’s more with a whimper, and there are still some operational services running.
When Dan meets the children, he’s the first person who doesn’t want to stick around. While others have come before to replace their parents, steal their food, and raid their medicine cabinets. The house also runs electricity through a treadmill, providing the availability of additional perks that aren’t as commonplace as they used to be. Dan isn’t interested in any of that, though he does find himself conflicted when Jack proposes he stay and help the two with projects to make the house more secure. Dan lets Jack call the shots and run the show, though there are a million little red flags suggesting something isn’t right.
Zombieism in Uncontained works differently from what most are used to in the subgenre. This isn’t a simple soulless biter mechanic; there’s a lot more to it than that. Like Warm Bodies and The Returned, Uncontained seeks to subvert the genre with variant zombies who work a little more like werewolves, cycling through stages of life and un-death. Uncontained’s friction mounts as local authoritative figure Brett Carson (Peter O’Meara) descends on Jack and Brooke’s home with a local militia while following clues about his missing daughter’s (Courtney Blythe Turk) whereabouts.
Nelson’s film is very much a family affair if you couldn’t tell from the actors’ names, but his reliance on his children makes Uncontained that much better. While some performances can lean a little stiff within the film, the kids effortlessly inject a ton of heart and bring out the best in their parents. Nicole Nelson plays Jack and Brooke’s mother in the film and has her moments as well, appearing like a Sarah Connor figure to help Dan and the kids out of a bind. That overarching connection makes the film that much more affecting,
There will be a lot of debate from the viewers of Uncontained, and I can foresee the arguments over the film’s story and style. Zombie traditionalists will say these new zombie mechanics are a blight on Romero’s name, but these are the same jerks who differentiate 28 Days Later’s “rage” virus as not true zombieism and offer nothing detailed or constructive to the conversation. Then there will be those that simply don’t like that Uncontained is like the late seasons of The Walking Dead, with character forward and absent of constant grotesquerie. If you’re looking for guts, gore, and a day-zero dopamine boost, Uncontained isn’t heavy on any of that.
However, the most interesting conversation will be how this low-budget effort offers a truly balanced, elevated, and genre-shifting presentation. Uncontained feels like a Western, specifically Jeremiah Johnson, where found family dynamics collide with a rescue party whose journey into sacred Indigenous territory creates a deadly retaliation from the Indigenous people. Nelson leans into the survival aspects of Sydney Pollack’s film and flips the script on the indigenous enemy of the 1972 film by providing strong characterizations of Carson’s rescue party and his values, aptly showing how he treats his younger daughter Gabriel (Haley LeBlanc), framing Carson’s wrath with surface level parental protection instincts, but an inferred sense of possession. The film ends with one hell of a showdown by these two groups, with some tricks that definitely feel infused with unused ideas that Nelson probably had while writing for The Walking Dead: Survival Instincts game.
Uncontained can occasionally feel like the kind of high-art and budgetarily constrained sci-fi horror story we often see in indie spaces. But Nelson, while skirting some of the zombie movie beats we’re used to, relies on pace, character connection, and good old-fashioned storytelling to make Uncontained a pulse-pounding endeavor. It’s also satisfying and a bit on the feel-good side by the time the credits start rolling (There is also a scene during the end credits, so stick around for that). If you’re a fan of subversive takes on a tired subgenre, or a fan of The Walking Dead, 28 Days Later, or Jeremiah Johnson, you may find Uncontained to be an entertaining hidden gem that George A. Romero would be singing the praises of.
Uncontained is now streaming exclusively on Screambox.
Uncontained | Official Trailer
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