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  • Stevie G1 November 2008
    Considering this is a low budget TV film Charlie Brooker has pulled off a fantastic little gem, based on the premise of a Zombie Outbreak in England and the tale of a eclectic band of survivors (most of whom already hate each others guts) stuck in the Big Brother House, a satirical comment on the vacuousness of Reality TV to rival Romero's commentary of consumerism in the original Dawn of the Dead.

    Taken as a gore fest with a huge dollop of black humour it works a treat and even the nihilistic ending fits so well into the message. Some great references throughout for Zombie Film Fans and Big Brother Fans alike. I like fast Zombies, much scarier and more threatening than traditional shufflers and considering the limited time this mini-series had they really were a necessity. Having some of the real ex-house mates and Davina as Zombies was a great touch.

    If you enjoyed Dawn of the Dead (2004), 28 Days and Weeks Later, REC and Shaun of the Dead, Dead Set is definitely worth a viewing.
  • I was going to say this could have been really bad but the mind of Charlie Brooker probably wasn't going to mess this up, and it delivered on multiple layers. brilliant acting, brilliant characters, possibly too brilliant gore effects. This is so much more than a zombie flick and it really had to be to succeed.

    Andy Nyman had many of the best lines but there were so many to go round, including Kathleen Mcdermotts delightfully dense pippa. all of em were engaging and believable, and Jamie Winstone obviously inherited some skills from her dad, she rules her scenes.

    watching something like this renews your hope in TV. there's probably more depth than can be consumed in one sitting and its incredibly entertaining to boot. I'll be thinking about this show for the next few days. more please.
  • Maybe it's impossible these days to make a zombie movie which doesn't feel reminiscent of others; in the case of the Charlie Brooker-scripted TV movie Dead Set, too much of the zombie carnage feels lifted from 28 Days/Weeks Later and the Dawn of the Dead remake. But to focus on that would be to overlook the brilliant angle Brooker brings to the genre, not least its premise: that some of the few survivors of the zombie holocaust are the house-mates in Big Brother. Other horror films have been had reality TV settings, but this Endemol-produced flick has the advantage of featuring actual BB stars: Davina McCall and a host of former house-mates. Of the actors, Andy Nyman stands out as the BB director whose character is clearly Brooker's stand-in for himself, and whose comedy scenes are sensibly kept separate from the horror until the final scenes. And it's so well-written that you'll actually be rooting for everyone to survive.

    If you love (a) zombie movies, or (b) Big Brother, Dead Set is *unmissably* good.

    However, I would recommend waiting for the 138-minute DVD on 3rd November, as I can't imagine it having half the impact when it's chopped up into five episodes, complete with ad breaks, as it will be on E4 next week.

    Hopefully Dead Set won't be quickly forgotten as a quirky little TV series on a minor channel, and will be recognised internationally as one of the decade's best zombie flicks.
  • What can i say, i was expecting really bad zombies and really bad horror from dead set, and i'm glad to say i was pleasantly surprised.

    although the acting wasn't amazing the rest of the programme was excellent, the zombies looked good, the special effects where OK and i really enjoyed the jerky camera angles.

    although any fan of horror wont find this scary (think dawn of the dead 2004 or 28 days later) it was very enjoyable.

    Channel 4 have done a great job making something original for a TV audience, i can honestly say i have not seen any original "horror" programming this good on TV since Ghost Watch about 15 years ago.

    well done channel 4!
  • For such an incredibly pervasive cultural icon (who doesn't have a Zombie Survival Plan?), the zombie is incredibly poorly represented by cinema. Most zombie films are terrible. In fact, the only zombie films that can really rank as classics even in horror movie terms are the first three Romero films. Beyond that you've got a band of competent efforts: some of the remakes of Romero, the comedy zombie films (Return of the Living Dead, Braindead etc.), the variations on the theme (Dario Argento's Demons, 28 Days Later, Versus) and Lucio Fulci's Zombie. All told that's less than a dozen films. Just about everything else has been terrible and I mean really terrible. Some of the worst cinema ever made is about zombies, most of it either zero-budget American dross or the worst Italy has to offer.

    With that in mind, Charlie Brooker's mini-series-cum-TV-movie Dead Set stands out from the pack by miles as a treatment of zombies which is actually very good. It's very well written, mixing realistic dialogue, spot-on satire of reality TV contestants and dark humour without ever getting the tone wrong. It's gory enough to please any splatter fan, with the first competent "ripped apart by zombies" scene in ages, and it manages to create an authentic mood of apocalyptic despair, with the collapse of society sharply depicted. Brooker even manages to fit some decent social commentary into the mix, and does it in a far more holistic and subtle manner that George Romero's latest attempt. Zombies-as-metaphor has always been the preferred way to impart depth onto the death, and Brooker puts in enough subtext about the braindead masses and their mindless consumption of TV and cinema to give you something to talk about afterwards other than the gore effects, should you so wish.

    What holds Dead Set back somewhat is its acquiescence to cliché. Like most 21st Century zombie outings, it's packed full of references, most of them to Romero, and the ultimate direction of the plot should be familiar to anyone who's ever watched a zombie film. Many of the shocks and outcomes to scenes will be utterly sign-posted to any fan of zombies, and even the gore effects are content to merely copy the work of Savini et al rather than strike out in his spirit of finding ever-more innovative mutilation of the human form. The over-use of shaky-cam is a more stylistic example of its unoriginality: using wobbly hand-held cameras to create that gritty documentary realism may have been original in 1998 in Saving Private Ryan, but in the decade since then it's been done to absolute death (excuse the pun).

    While it does nothing new, Dead Set is still a triumph because it does the old far more proficiently than most have managed. And it's nice to see a British backdrop to the nightmarish apocalypse once again.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Well into the latest season of England's reality TV hit, Big Brother, a zombie plague suddenly breaks out. With chaos erupting outside, the house-mates are safely locked away in the Big Brother house without the faintest idea that anything's wrong.

    I watched this back in January after receiving the DVD from Amazon UK, and what can I say? I suppose that I could best sum it up by just saying wow! Dead Set is a brilliant serial, not to mention the best damn thing to come out of the UK's horror scene in well over a decade. To hell with The Descent, Charlie Brooker's zombie opus is horror to be proud of! I really appreciated the nihilism on display here. There's satire, and it's spot-on. However, make no mistake about it, this is a bleak piece of work. The use of the Big Brother house is very inspired, and depending on how you look at it, the fact that the contestants are the only people who are truly safe just adds to the depressing nature of the series. Of course, human nature can ruin that safety net real quick.

    That brings me to the characters. Most of them are annoying, as they should be. This is Big Brother we're talking about here! The only 100% likable character in the series is Alex (Liz May Brice). She's also the only character with no connection to the reality series, big shock. Then there's Patrick (Andy Nyman), the show's tyrannical director. He's an over the top lunatic, but he's so much fun to watch. Donkey Punch's Jaime Winstone gets the lead role of Kelly, the producer who clues the house-mates in to the carnage going on around them. Of the show's contestants, Joplin is the most memorable. Again, he's not exactly likable, but I did find myself feeling a bit sorry for him. The others in the house treat him poorly and refer to him as Gollum behind his back. Kathleen McDermott plays Pippa, the most grating house-mate. If I have one complaint, it's that they killed Davina McCall off far too quickly. Pippa should have been offed instead.

    This thing doesn't hold back on the gore either. There's some nasty stuff here, often accompanied by jet black humor. Just look at the bit where Patrick goes off on a hilarious diatribe while cutting up a body to distract the zombies. I also got a kick out of the nods to George Romero's films, such as Patrick's demise and Mark mistaking Riq for a zombie.

    I watched all five episodes back to back. At about 140 minutes complete with "previously on" intros, this feels like one big zombie epic. I loved the absolute hell out of it.
  • What's not to like about a sudden zombie apocalypse trolling the attention seeking celeb wannabe contestants of a burned out reality TV gameshow? What's even better was that they used Channel 4's Big Brother and its original host to completely and utterly take the mick out of the tragically useless stereotypes that get picked for this show every year. Kevin Eldon did a fantastic job especially, portraying the miserable armchair politician type with a crush without a hope.

    Dead Set takes a few good actors, a few television comics, and a brilliant special effects workshop and makes one of the best British efforts in horror there's been since 28 Days Later.

    The great cinematography lends a lot of suspense and atmosphere, all in the right places (when it's taking itself seriously). The gore is fantastic and well executed, and the whole film - even the funny parts - are bleak.

    What cheapens it for me is how quickly survival leads good characters into the clichéd survival mode reserved for Americans in B-movies. That ultimately leads to the movie's predictable ending with people dying stupidly where they don't die horrifically, but the comedy element somewhat balances that with equal measure.

    I don't know if it was supposed to have some message at the end, but the one I took away was along the lines of "good, Davina's dead, let's put something else on the telly!" Never happened.
  • tr9110 August 2013
    Although I'm fan of Big Brother, I have only just got round to watching Dead Set. I love the idea around this mini series and it turned out to be a great watch.

    The characters were likable and portrayed well, they was like proper housemates. Having Davina as the host also made it feel more real. The plot was great and progressed at a nice pace, leaving you wanting more after every episode had finished. This action was extremely fast paced and gory, there was also quite a lot of humour which I liked, it was just a good solid drama series in general. Jaime Winstone who played Kelly really stole the show, she was great.

    It was kept short and sweet with just 5 episodes, 4 of which were only 25 minutes. The set looked great and the zombies were very detailed. The action was thick and fast.

    The way it all ended might not be everyone's favourite but for me that was inevitable. Overall an extremely good series, better than I thought it would be. Would recommend it to anyone, although it isn't that scary.

    9/10.
  • bliss71 November 2008
    Warning: Spoilers
    Had really high hopes for this zombie series, hell, anything with zombies in is worth a look even more so when it's on television as a series. Unfortunately, the zombies weren't the problem, it was every thing else! As everyone is no doubt aware the series revolves around a zombie outbreak and the remaining contestants in the UK Big Brother house. Add in a few television crew and some outsiders and you have what is a few days of survival horror against an army of the undead. Plus, these aren't your shuffling Romero undead, they're more your Snyder fast zombie. Sounds good eh? On a personal note, I still prefer my zombie to be slow and menacing, rather than fast and instant... if you get what I mean.

    However, bar the build up and the initial zombie attack, we're left with so many annoying characters trying to survive that quite frankly you won't be cheering for them more than you'll be cheering for the zombies. Why is it that the majority of the female characters seem more in control and sensible than ALL of the male characters? Even the female lead (Kelly) seems to have had fire-arms training (apart from the fact she seems to constantly want to chamber an extra bullet before firing - sorry, nitpicking a bit). The male characters range from loud and annoying to stupid and panic stricken. Yep, come the end, you'll be clapping every time one of them gets eaten alive.

    The camera work has been mentioned before but I feel needs highlighting again. Why is it that some directors seem to believe that true horror can only be gained by having the camera shake around constantly. I'm all for building up the tension but this can be done with storyline, music, acting.. etc.. not by putting the camera in the hands of a 5 year old on a skateboard. Plus, Dead Set does feature some very nice gore effects (top marks for this) yet 'shaky-cam' distracts from this. You'll be trying to see through the shakes just to work out what's going on.

    Saying all that though, the fact that this was a series on television and it did feature some very disgusting moments, makes me give it a 6 out of 10. I can only hope that it isn't a one off and we will see more like it. Yes, maybe even a weekly zombie series. Just please stay away from the 'shaky cam' routine, and lets have some characters we want to like, rather than characters we just want to see become zombie lunch!
  • Charlie Brooker might be my favorite person working in entertainment on both sides of the biz: commentator and content creator. His series, "Charlie Brooker's Screenwipe", is one of the most astute, insightful, hilarious and informative about television you'll come across, and its spin-off, "Newswipe", really lifts the lid off TV news). As a longtime zombie aficionado (as well as purveyor), I came to this with high expectations and was not disappointed. If anything, it overwhelmed me with how breathtakingly good it was.

    Ballsier than most horror features, "Dead Set" is also richly satirical, brilliantly written and beautifully acted. Each character is fully realized and distinct, the performances across the board stellar, with lead Jaime Winstone tough, capable and winsome. Andy Nyman almost steals the show as Patrick, the profane producer. He channels Brooker's venomous wit and amps it up. Whereas Brooker as a TV personality can spew invective with charm and good humor (even when he seriously loathes something), Patrick radiates malignance. But because of Nyman's great gifts as an actor, he renders Patrick somehow magnetic. Even when he's doing some truly unspeakable acts, you cannot look away (though some more sensitive viewers might want to watch through interlaced fingers).

    I would put this on the top shelf of zombie--or indeed any horror--cinema. It's credible, exciting, captivating and worthy of multiple viewings.
  • When I read what it was about I thought "not a zombie series again please". And when I read it was going to be in a Big Brother house I was really skeptical because is there anything more boring to watch then Big Brother or any other reality show. Wannabe attention seekers that want their minutes of fame, I still don't get why so many people watch those kind of meaningless shows. So yes, I was very skeptical before starting watching Dead Set. And I must admit, after seeing the whole show in one day, that it is way better then that disastrous series called The Walking Dead. Okay maybe some of the actors from Dead Set are as annoying as all the actors of The Walking Dead but that's only because their role is to play a Big Brother candidate and it's a fact that those kind of people are boring to watch. So they actually did a great job with their respective performances. Another difference between Dead Set and The Walking Dead is that in Dead Set the zombies are actually dangerous. They are fast, not like the turtles from The Walking Dead. The horror details are very gory and well done, much better then in The Walking Dead. So in fact, everything about this show is better then in The Walking Dead. But the biggest difference between the American and the British zombie show is that the British one is short, to the point, and easy to watch. The American show is boring, never-ending and completely pointless to watch. Long live the British series. They exactly know how to make a good show unlike the Americans that try to milk out every series until the last drop.
  • OMG LOVE THIS PROGRAMME! just saw the first episode on E4 and i bloody love it! it was about time they made a show about zombies and I've got to say its some scary stuff. It feels so real as i have always followed the big brother show and it feels as if it is actually happening as the show shows camera angles as if you were actually watching big brother! The zombies are totally scary and the special effects are great for just a TV programme. Davina did an amazing job as acting herself obviously when she was doing the eviction scene but when she became one of the zombies she was very good and was believable cannot wait till the next episode tomorrow if anyone missed it they should definitely catch up on it on 4OD absolutely brilliant! I even jumped a few times!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Can't help but feel like Dead Set would have been more enjoyable when it was released and in the cinematic climate of the time.

    More than 10 years later and, to be brutally honest, the directing, effects, dialogue, story and painfully frustrating tropes all help to make it just not as enjoyable as I'd have hoped.

    That's not to say that there's nothing to enjoy here, and it's clear that those involved cared about this project. But the show hasn't aged well, the characters make dumb decisions, the plot requires suspension of disbelief and it all feels like I should have been watching this years ago. It's a shame as like some have said, had this have been made in today's climate in light of all the "zombie" related movies and shows since, it may have been really good.

    I can list numerous moments that just make for insanely frustrating viewing, but i'll only mention one to serve as an example.

    In the second episode where they visit the supermarket to pickup "pharmacy supplies" for their friend who was bit and needs urgent attention as the infection "is fast acting and turns you quickly" (how does everyone else turn so quickly but their black friend seems to last hours?). They arrive at the supermarket and upon entering throw a loud metal object to attract the attention of any zombies. They then proceed to spend some time inside chatting and whatnot and upon leaving one of them drops a crowbar, and suddenly, only a few feet away a zombie appears??? They run outside of the supermarket to find their friend who was waiting for them by the car has been met by 2 passing policemen. The policemen then proceed to unleash what seems like a rather large clip on 2 zombies, only hitting them about once or twice each using roughly 20-30 bullets or so. Apparently they are the worst shot policemen in the country. One of the zombies manages to rush one of the policemen holding a pistol and jumps on him when he fails to shoot him in the head point blank. The other cop then puts 1 single bullet directly in the bitten cops head after realising he can shoot straight.

    I could go on but I simply don't have the time and I doubt anyone wants to read it.

    The show is worth a watch if you have the spare time and I wouldn't right it off entirely, just be prepared to be annoyed by stupid characters making stupid decisions and some far far beyond belief story writing.
  • Than what would they rate 28 Days Later? No way no how does this movie go toe to toe with 28 days. Not even in the same room. With that said, it was kinda good, better than a lot of the other Zombie movies out there. Had one of the better zombie feasting scenes I've seen. What I didn't particularly like was the excessive camera jostling during the action scenes. The effect can be cool sometimes but these guys laid it out for anything going faster than a mall walker. And it didn't help that the camera was at extreme close up while all this shaking was taking place. Harder to watch than most. Picture the original Blair Witch on ultra fast forward.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Set largely in the confines of a fictional "Big Brother" house and cleverly containing appearances from real previous occupants, this low-budget British horror comedy is a surprisingly effective television mini-series.

    The first episode is longer in length than subsequent installments but really sets the scene for the mayhem to come.

    Jaime Winstone is the feisty heroine of the tale, a runner who's just as competent at smashing a zombie's skull with a fire extinguisher as she is fetching coffee for the crew.

    The sight of a zombified Davina McCall is genuinely chilling. McCall's performance is stunning, I really didn't expect such a convincing appearance as a member of the undead's growing ranks.

    While it may be argued that "Dead Set" does nothing to enhance zombie mythology, I think it's a perfect companion to the best examples from this genre.

    Unmissable.
  • InaneSwine6 November 2008
    Charlie Brooker breaks a number of boundaries in creating this magnificent series - but most importantly, he has written the only zombie television series to date, either in the UK or the US. Although the plot contains more gaping wounds than Davina McCall after a zombie's had a go at her, what it lacks in integrity it makes up for in sheer suspense and terror. The premise is laughable - a zombie outbreak is bringing Britain to its knees, and the only ones unaware of this are locked safely inside the "Big Brother" house - but this little gem turns out to be an extremely frightening experience.

    While Big Brother host Davina McCall steals the show, she does not play a particularly challenging role, and finds her initial role of playing a fictional version of herself even more challenging than playing a bloodthirsty zombie. On the other hand, Jaime Winstone and the rest of the cast put in fantastic performances all round. One of the series' only faults is the very shaky and often frustrating camera-work, which can be effective at times in adding to the realistic "documentary feel", but often just makes it difficult to work out what is actually happening on screen.

    While making a few jabs at the state of British television and celebrity culture - the world is coming to an end, yet Big Brother is still on - the series also manages to deliver truly terrifying scenes and a great sense of nihilism throughout.
  • Big Brother UK and all international versions were/are a hit around the world. Love or hate Big Brother, Dead Set is an official fictional horror incarnation directed by Charlie Brooker.

    In a nut shell, the story is that a zombie outbreak occurs while the Big Brother reality show is being filmed, but the house-mates at first are unaware of the chaos outside.

    The five part episodes ran on E4, but is better watched as a whole. The style of the filming is similar to the virus flicks 28 Days/ 28 weeks Later and Dead Set could almost be viewed as a fitting companion to the two movies.

    UK past contestants including Imogen Thomas, Ziggy Lichman and Helen Adams make brief appearances. But presenter Davina McCall steals the show playing herself and then as convincingly scarily member of the un-dead. Some of the effects and action are horrifically realistic, at times real tension and emotion is created.

    Dead Set is bleak, bloody and full of irony as the wanna-be celeb's have to fight for their lives. Where as classic zombie film Dawn of the Dead tackled consumerism, this is a great reflective piece on society's obsession with the reality shows and becoming a celebrity.

    Overall, a good mix of drama, horror and black-comedy that's packed with zombies.
  • Was recommended this series after watching Black Mirror and I think that affected how I experienced it. Black Mirror is leagues ahead of this show but damn its actually a really good series with a very to the point mediation on the zombie like nature of humans and the consumption of pop media in the UK. I felt like there could've been more commentary as the story developed but for the length it does it's job as a zombie series well. Definitely rather watch this rather than Walking Dead. Character development can be a bit blunt with inexplicably difficult character but it leads to a cathartic conclusion.
  • If you've watched every episode of The Walking Dead and seen all the quality zombie movies such as The Dawn of the Dead remake, Shaun of the Dead, Zombieland etc... and your wondering what's left. The answer is Dead Set.

    Imagine 28 Days Later the mini series and that just about sums it up. A zombie apocalypse breaks out in London in the midst of the production of the latest series of Big Brother. This premise allows for plenty of social commentary & biting satire. The BB director character Patrick is like David Brent from The Office but even more of a jerk. Hilarious. There is bitter sweet emotional drama too. The action is intense and frightening. Damn those fast zombies. They are stressful. Give me the slow American ones any day. Just kidding. Absolutely loved it! Check it out!
  • kosmasp23 September 2012
    Or how about "Big Dead Brother is eating you"? There are quite a few lines you can come up with, with a premise like that. And for a TV show it is pretty graphic in its depiction of violence and blood (not for the squeamish then). The premise is more than nice, actually intriguing. The fact the undead are running might put you off (depending on your liking, I do like the slow ones myself), but give it a try, it's not that long (just over 2 hours).

    While effects and make-up are great, you couldn't do it without the acting talent. Andy Nyman is on great form as the main "human" villain in this piece. Of course, as he also states in interviews in the bonus material, his character doesn't see himself as the bad guy. And some might like him the best. He definitely stirs things up. Decent and good effort then.
  • I thought that there would never be a zombie epic to beat or even overshadow George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead (apart from Shaun of the Dead) and now FINALLY I think we in Britain have finally got a film/TV movie/ mini series that does rival that. Dead set is a horror set around the Big Brother phenomenon and a terrifying real zombie apocalypse. The general public and the house-mates even the crew of Big Brother become unknowingly involved in a vicious fight for survival as the dead start eating the entire British population one chunk at a time. I truly loved this, I love zombie movies (yes even the crap and extremely cheesy ones too) and this was the best millennium zombie based survival horror I have ever seen. As far as I was concerned the remake of Dawn of the Dead, remake of Day of the Dead, the new 3D version of Night of the living dead and every other 'poser' zombie movie out there nowadays that doesn't fulfil the code of the zombie horror movie i.e. intense scenes and graphic gore, Dead set fulfils on all levels. Firstly the acting is great from Andy Nyman (severance) as the totally obnoxious producer of Big Brother Patrick to Jamie Winstone as the poor floor runner Kelly forced to become the heroine in charge of the survival of the house-mates of the Big Brother house. There's even past BB housemates who star in cameos at the start of the series and some even become zombies later but you'll have to watch it to find out who becomes one and who becomes zombie brunch. Next I'll move to the gore. Don't think that just cause this was a made for TV movie that they skimp on the gore because they don't. I was very surprised by the gore and bloody carnage that they were allowed to put on the small screen. E4 have definitely pulled out their balls and had the guts (no pun intended) to show this movie he way we'd expect it to be seen in all its gutsy glory (again no pun intended.) Some of the effects rival that of Tom Savini's groundbreaking and very gruesome special FX on the original George A. Romero's Day of the Dead. I was in awe by what they were allowed to show on the screen and thank god they did. Next the social commentary that George included in Dawn is re-invented and used in Dead Set. How the characters talk about the zombies and how the zombies watch the revealing show via TV sets that they walk around finding their next meal and what society is reduced to. Lastly the zombies in this are genuinely chilling, they look menacing and vicious even at times somewhat evil and very ravenous… and I mean ravenous for human flesh (take note Resident Evil Trilogy) Yes even for the first time I can even pass the fact that these zombies can run and pretty damn fast. Just like the zombies from Dawn of the Dead remake, Day of the dead remake and 28 days/weeks later these will tear after you if you are seen and that is scary but although they can do that the slow style of zombie i.e. Romero's zombies are much more frightening than the fast future style zombies of today. The dark overtone of the story adds an air of dread to the atmospheric tension and terror that Dead Set has deep in the underbelly of Charlie Brooker's well thought out script. Britain proves that what Hollywood can do, with a bit of careful structure and preparation the UK can do it better. We did it with Shaun of the Dead which was a global hit and I believe that we can easily do it again with Dead Set when it finally reaches USA shores soon. The climax genuinely had made both thrilled, chilled and scared and not many horrors can do that with me.

    Dead Set is a thrilling gory"shoot me again I ain't dead yet" exciting piece of UK style horror and should be seen to be believed.
  • Great little piece - a well mix of gore and comedy and some unique ideas (!) and on top a pro production, and most surprisingly - it's all about zombies!

    Got this mini series 2008 straight in my collection and re-watched it lately. Still good and outstanding in a genre that is flooded with bad to very bad and extremely bad "movies". Strangely, this gem has remained largely unknown to a broader audience.

    A must watch - if you like the combination comedy + the undead.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I don't often watch horror movies. I saw "Night of the Living Dead" when I was young and it scared me so much I still had nightmares well into my adulthood about zombies attacking me. But when I heard about "Dead Set" I was intrigued.

    Every year since "Big Brother" started in the UK I would say I wasn't going to waste another summer watching it, and then I would get hooked mid series and spend hours on the Digital Spy Big Brother Forums arguing about the chances and the personalities of the housemates. "Big Brother" began as a curiosity, and an experiment. The first series was fascinating as a study of aspects of British society: how people from different backgrounds interacted in a confined environment. The second series was not as revealing as the audience and the contestants knew what to expect, but it was still interesting to watch. But by Big Brother 5 the tone of the show changed from participation to conflict: that series was notorious for a fight that broke out between the housemates that was so violent the live TV feed was temporarily taken off the air. By the end of the 7th series I felt the housemates entered the programme solely to obtain magazine deals and promotional contracts and they would do whatever they felt necessary to raise their value as celebrities, including having sex on camera or abusing other housemates. I was sickened by scenes of housemates being bullied and lingering shots of upset contestants crying. I didn't watch the last two series of the show.

    "Dead Set" is frightening. The gore didn't scare me: I was actually impressed by the prosthetics. The premise is apt: "Big Brother" eviction nights have become known for baying crowds. It's rare now when a housemate doesn't get booed, and the security has obviously been increased to keep housemates from being attacked by the crowd. I can see the crowd becoming bestial and tearing the contestants apart, as they do in "Dead Set". The portraits of the contestants are accurate: people were discussing on the Digital Spy BB forum which former housemates the "Dead Set" housemates reminded them of. It's telling that when one encounters Kelly he ignores her distress and her being covered with blood and immediately asks how he's perceived by the outside, and how another picks up a Heat magazine in a garage forecourt shop and comments on how the magazine's coverage of him is rubbish.

    It's also apt that the only TV signal still operating emits from a camera in the Big Brother house. The survivors of the apocalyptic world are left watching at first the housemates fight off the zombies, with the help of Kelly from the production staff. Later, all that is left is the zombie Kelly staring into the camera, being watched by the undead stumbling through shopping malls. The show is still society watching itself: only now the public has turned into savage flesh-eating monsters watching savage flesh-eating monsters.

    The casting of former BB housemates and BB presenter Davina McCall is the icing on the cake. Davina's prolonged attack on the producer and the evicted housemate is metaphoric: it's revealing that she is the only zombie who threatens them. I only wish "Dead Set" suggested a little more about how "Big Brother" and the viewers are reduced to mob behaviour and animalistic violence. It would have benefited from more comments about the events of the eviction night and the aftermath by a character who is a seasoned viewer (perhaps one of the fans who attended the eviction night could have survived and joined the housemates, Kelly, and Kelly's boyfriend) or more scenes of people watching the show before and after the outbreak. The satire would have been sharpened from some more inclusion of one of the key elements of "Big Brother", the telephone vote. But as it stands the ending is truly chilling, especially Kelly's pronouncing the housemate in the control room the winner of Big Brother. "Dead Set" raises many questions about what winning Big Brother truly entails; I just wish it raised more questions about what "Big Brother" reflects.
  • This preposterous piece of rubbish full of cardboard cutout characters should be banished to the bin which served as a toilet in the series.

    I'm a big Brooker fan but this series left me wondering what on earth compelled him to write such trite, glib characters and then try and shoehorn them into a zombie plot.

    Maybe it was his way of practising for "Black Mirror", which was far superior to this tripe.

    There's no excuse for all of the characters in the film doing what they do and the way that they do it, and my suspension of disbelief ran out when nobody ever mentioned the word "Zombie" or ever mentioned having seen a zombie film.

    As for "multi-layered social criticism" then an episode of Top Cat has more of that than this mish-mash of pseudo intellectual claptrap.

    My friend who recommended this to me will be severely punished when we next meet.

    Cheers, Will
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It's not even mediocre and below average, even for zombie films. It doesn't have the originality or compelling characters of Romero's trilogy. None of the humor of a couple of the zombie satires. None of the inventiveness or broad scope of TWD. Just irritating whiners, and nothing else.

    The big problem is you don't care a single bit about any character. The first episode spends 20 minutes showing every single one of them as shallow, self absorbed, idiots who think being abrasive and not caring about anyone else makes you "daring" or "edgy."

    IOW, people you would avoid at a party, work, or on the street are who the series wants you to root for. In reality (and not the fake reality of these shows that only the equally vapid and brain dead watch) all you get is an excuse to enjoy gore and a cynical kill 'em all story that titillates the very sheltered and jaded.

    Occasionally the action scenes are plotted well. Fast forward past any scene where they substitute shouting for dialog, which is all of them.
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