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New Zealand comedy horror film by Jonathan King From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Sheep is a 2006 New Zealand comedy horror film written and directed by Jonathan King. It was produced by Philippa Campbell and stars Nathan Meister, Danielle Mason, Peter Feeney, Tammy Davis, Glenis Levestam, Tandi Wright, and Oliver Driver as a group of people who must defend themselves when a genetic engineering experiment turns harmless sheep into bloodthirsty zombies.
Black Sheep | |
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Directed by | Jonathan King |
Written by | Jonathan King |
Produced by | Philippa Campbell |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Richard Bluck |
Edited by | Chris Plummer |
Music by | Victoria Kelly |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Icon Film Distribution[1] |
Release dates |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | New Zealand |
Box office | US$5 million[1] |
Black Sheep premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2006 and was theatrically released in New Zealand on March 29, 2007. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and grossed $5 million at the box office. It also received a Narcisse Award nomination for Best Feature Film. A sequel is in development.
Young Henry Oldfield lives on a sheep farm in New Zealand with his older brother Angus and his father Oliver. When Angus witnesses Oliver's pride on Henry's natural ability at farming, he plays a cruel prank on him involving the bloody corpse of his pet sheep, just moments before Mrs. Mac, the farm's housekeeper, tells them that Oliver has been killed in an accident. The combined shock of these two incidents leads Henry to develop a crippling phobia of sheep.
Fifteen years later, Henry returns to New Zealand to sell his share of the farm to Angus, who, unknown to Henry, is carrying out secret genetic experiments with his assistant Dr. Astrid Rush that turns sheep from docile vegetarians into ferocious carnivores whose bite can transform a human into a bloodthirsty half-sheep monstrosity. Meanwhile, environmental activists Experience and Grant accidentally release a mutant lamb, who bites Grant and infects him. The lamb then escapes into the fields and infects other sheep.
Henry and his childhood friend Tucker visit the farm and notice that the flock refuses to run away. They team up with Experience and investigate a farmhouse, where they find the farmer's mutilated body. Henry sees a sheep in the hallway and, due to his phobia, quietly shuts the door to lock it. The sheep crashes through the door and Tucker shoots it. On the other end of the farmhouse, Angus sees Grant, who bites him and runs off. Henry, Tucker, and Experience attempt to warn Angus about the sheep, but another sheep hiding in the car bites Tucker.
After the car is destroyed, they seek refuge in the laboratory, where Henry finally realize that Angus is conducting inhuman experiments. When Dr. Rush see that Tucker's foot has now become a sheep's foot, she keeps him there for study. Henry and Experience escape when Angus cannot bring himself to shoot dead his own brother. Flocks of sheep come running down the hill toward an offal pit surrounded by a gate. Henry and Experience accidentally slip into a pit, and Angus refuses to help them. Tucker transforms into a half-human, half-sheep hybrid and Dr. Rush administers him an injection of amniotic fluid from one of the mutant lambs, which transforms him back into human. When Dr. Rush goes outisde to give the news to Angus, she is killed by a sheep.
Angus gives a presentation to businessmen about his new genetically engineered sheep, but the businessmen are soon slaughtered by the flock. Henry and Experience escape through the tunnels and try to warn Angus, but they learn he has a love for sheep and leave in disgust. Henry realizes he has been infected as the flock no longer attack him or Angus; not willing to risk hurting Experience if he fully transforms, Henry kisses her goodbye and parts away. Henry returns to the laboratory and fights Angus, who has now transformed into a gargantuan mutant half-human, half-sheep creature; however, only as intelligent as a sheep, Angus is kept in check by Henry and the farm's sheep dog.
While Angus is cornered by the dog, the revolving propeller of the family's plane cuts into him and wounds him badly. Experience and Tucker arrive with Mrs. Mac to disinfect both Angus and Henry with more amniotic fluid, administered via a medicine nozzle designed for sheep. Angus goes back to the flock for them to bite him again but the flock, driven by his wound's blood, maul him to death instead. Eventually, the flock is contained and killed in a massive explosion of ignited sheep flatulence. The cure is give to the surviving half-human, half-sheep hybrids, including Grant, who are all turned back into humans. Suddenly, the sheep dog begins bleating like a sheep.
The film's special effects were handled by Weta Workshop, including participation from Richard Taylor. It was financed in part by an investment from the Korean company Daesung Group. It was also the first time a Korean company had directly invested in a New Zealand film, though Weta Workshop had previously collaborated with Korean effects houses on the South Korean film The Host.[2]
Black Sheep premiered at the 31st Toronto Film Festival on September 10, 2006 as part of their Midnight Madness series[3][4] and was theatrically released in New Zealand on March 29, 2007. Black Sheep was released on DVD and Blu-ray on October 9, 2007 by Icon Home Entertainment.
In Spain, Manga Films released it on August 15, 2007, in a double-session Grindhouse lookalike after Severance. Warner Home Video (via Manga Films and its successor Vértice360) released the film on DVD on November 20, 2007, and in Blu-ray in March 2014 In North America, IFC Films picked up theatrical distribution rights, and Genius Products and The Weinstein Company released on DVD via their Dimension Extreme label
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 72% of 96 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 6.4/10. The site's consensus reads: "With an outrageous premise played completely straight, Black Sheep is a violent, grotesque, and very funny movie that takes B-movie lunacy to a delirious extreme."[5] On Metacritic, it received a rating of 62/100 based on 17 reviews.[6] In a positive review, the Houston Chronicle's Bruce Westbrook stated that the film combines its many influences with fresh ideas.[7] Nigel Floyd of Time Out London rated the film 4/5 stars and called it a "treat for horror comedy fans".[8] Philip French, writing for The Guardian, called it a "lively affair" and "full of what might be called shear terror".[9] Andrew Pulver, also of The Guardian, was less impressed; he rated the film 2/5 and wrote that Shaun of the Dead had set the bar high for comedy horrors.[10] Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, Volume 2, academic Peter Dendle described it as an "excellent offering" that has zombie sheep "every bit as violent and contagious as the infected in 28 Days Later and other contemporary zombie fare".[11]
On November 5, 2024, it was announced that a sequel is in the works, with Jonathan King returning as director.[13]
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