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The film revolves around the story of Gerry Lane, an UN employee. One day, Gerry Lane with his wife and children are stuck in a traffic jams in the city. Used to be investigator at the UN, Lane realizes this is not an ordinary traffic jam. When helicopters fight in the sky with the hustle of police cars on the street, the city begins to sink in panic. An unidentified virus spreads with astonishing speed and turns healthy people into bloodthirsty zombies, kill each other. The number of people infected is increasing exponentially each day and this quickly becomes a catastrophe on the global scale.
Pitt conducts himself manfully throughout the proceedings -- he is never less than believable while facing off against this pandemic -- but if I never see another zombie in the movies, I will not feel deprived.
World War Z>/i> is a breathless roller-coaster that bites down when you want it to and mercifully releases so you can munch more popcorn before the next attack.
An atmospheric, frequently creepy zombie thriller that strikes a nice balance between horror and action-adventure, leaning on familiarity but never abusing it.
As compelling as Pitt is at reflecting the world's pain through Lane's eyes, the movie treats him too often as if he truly is the only one with loved ones to lose or a world to save.
June 21, 2013
Orange County Register
World War Z hits the blockbuster equivalent of a delicate balance: gargantuan spectacle with a human touch.
As both thrilling spectacle and escapist summer entertainment, World War Z is enormously effective, with Brad Pitt at the center hopscotching the globe in search of the origin of a zombie apocalypse.