It is said that "Zombie Strippers" is adapted from the absurdist drama "Rhino" created by Eugene Ionesco, and the script is written by director Jay Lee himself.
As a B-level film, "Zombie Strippers" has two points of interest. The first is that this horror film is also a comedy film. Some people think that it is more funny than "Zombie Shaun", and some people simply have to To conclude that Zombie Strippers stole inspiration from Shaun of Zombies, of course, it wasn't. In any case, making a zombie film interesting is a good attempt, and this has been recognized by most of the audience who have seen it, and the special effects and makeup of the film are also quite good.
The second point of "Zombie Strippers" is that director Jay Lee casts the superstar Jenna Jameson, known as the "queen of porn", as the star of the pornographic film industry. Jenna Jameson, who is of Italian descent, was born in a police family and grew up in Las Vegas. She began to learn ballet since she was a child. At first, she performed striptease in Las Vegas clubs, and later , after shooting the cover of some magazines, he joined the pornographic film industry, and won three industry awards in a year, creating an unprecedented record. In 2005 and 2006, she was also selected as one of Men's Gang's 100 Sexiest Women of the Year. In addition, she collaborated with Neil Strauss on the best-selling book, How to Have Sex with a Porn Star: A Conservative Story, which was on the New York Times bestseller list. stayed for six weeks.
"Zombie Strippers" director Jay Lee is such a quintessential American fringe director that it's hard to even tell if he belongs in Hollywood. However, with his enthusiasm and the all-round performance of screenwriting, directing, editing, and photography, he can still continue his beloved film career. This "Zombie Stripper" has been recognized by horror fans since its small-scale release in North America on April 18. It's by no means the kind of well-made movie, and a lot of times it's deliberately parodying bad movies for comedic effect. And this film is very sincere, not letting the two words in the title fail.
B-movie directors like Jay Lee always give me a sense of sympathy, and they pursue film as much as I write and film — not human inside or out. Yet the US still has B-grade subsistence soils, but we don't. When China has B-level films, we will have hope.
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