Night of the Living Deb
Night of the Living Deb
| 30 May 2015 (USA)
Night of the Living Deb Trailers

After a one night stand Deb wakes up in the middle of a zombie apocalypse.

Reviews
Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
UnowPriceless hyped garbage
Supelice Dreadfully Boring
DipitySkillful an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.
Michael Ledo In environmentally friendly Portland, Maine, shy Deb (Maria Thayer) throws herself at pretty boy Ryan (Michael Cassidy) while at a bar. Neither remembers anything about the night before and Ryan wants to give her the boot from his apartment. Deb, meanwhile, makes it difficult for him. The next thing you know there is a local zombie outbreak.This is a fun comedy romance with zombies. Maria Thayer nails it and I couldn't help think about how she was Emma Stone good. The comedy and one liners oozed sweetly during much of the film. The graffiti throughout the town was funny for those that bother to look at it. Original and fresh.Guide: 1-2 F-bombs. No sex or nudity. Syd Wilder spilling out of her top.
Claudio Carvalho On the Eve of July, 4th, in Portland, Maine, the camerawoman and aspiring anchor Deb Clarington (Maria Thayer) is drinking with her best friend Ruby (Julie Brister) in a bar. She falls for a handsome stranger and flirts with him. They drink a lot together and in the morning, Deb wakes up in his apartment in an awkward situation since they do not remember what they did on the previous night. When Deb leaves his apartment, she finds in middle of a zombie apocalypse. She returns to the apartment and she learns that he is Ryan Waverly (Michael Cassidy), the son of the wealthy Frank Waverly (Ray Wise), who is the responsible for supplying water to the town. Deb decides to leave Portland to meet her mother, but Ryan convinces her to go to the mansion of his father to meet his brother Chaz Waverly (Chris Marquette) and his girlfriend Stacy (Syd Wilder) and leave the town together. Soon Den learns that Frank and the Governor are the responsible for the outbreak. Will they succeed to escape from the zombies?"Night of the Living Deb" is one of those films that the viewer wants to like, mostly because of the cute lead actress. However the writers are weak and the cast has unfunny dialogues and situations in the screenplay. In the end, this movie is a waste of a nice cast. My vote is five.Title (Brazil): Not Available
Michael_Elliott Night of the Living Deb (2015) ** (out of 4)Deb (Maria Thayer) wakes up after a night of drinking in the apartment of Ryan (MichaeL Cassidy). The two quickly try to play off their night but soon they're back together when they realize that a zombie apocalypse has broken out.NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB isn't the greatest horror spoof ever created but there are a couple nice laughs that help keep it moving but there's really not enough here for a feature-length film. I think this here would have worked much better as a short film because there's really no plot here as we basically see Deb, a rather nerdy person, falling in love with the good looking Ryan and the majority of the film has her being mistreated or taken advantage of. Oh yeah, the other thing is that she is very sarcastic and this is where the majority of the laughs come from.Thankfully both Thayer and Cassidy are good in their roles and this certainly helps since we spend the majority of the running time with them. Thayer is the star here and she turns in a nice performance but I still felt that only twenty-percent or so of her jokes actually worked. The film could have benefited had there been something more going on. Perhaps more in-jokes or at least something more to hold the viewer's attention.As it stands, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB has a creative title but it's too bad the film itself wasn't more creative.
Leofwine_draca Another zombie comedy. The makers of this film seem to think that's some kind of a novel thing, but it really isn't because I've watched about half a dozen such films that were made in the last few years and most of them have been a wash out. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB is no exception, a film that fails due to the appalling low brow humour and completely irritating cast of characters, none more so than Deb herself.This film unwisely attempts to meld the romantic comedy genre with the zombie film. I hate rom coms so I was instantly turned off by the premise and struggled to sit through it if I'm honest. The character of Deb, as played by Maria Thayer, is described as "endearingly awkward" on this film's home page and it soon becomes obvious that the writers want you to warm to her quirkiness, her accident prone nature, her dumb idiosyncrasies. The problem is that I didn't. I found her supremely irritating and she made me want to switch the television off.The rest of the cast are no better, with Chris Marquette stuck in first gear with repetitive jokes and wooden acting. The only veteran performer is Ray Wise (ROBOCOP), who you have to feel for, being stuck in this inanity. After a mildly original set up, the narrative soon descends into the 'escape from one situation to the next' mould, all set at night in a local location. There are splattery gore effects and bad zombie acting, and none of it is remotely entertaining. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB is a film which demands a shot through the head to put it out of its misery.