El Wray tells the Sheriff not to touch a "zombie" that is infected, and the Sheriff can get the infection from a touch. And yet, throughout the whole film, in adherence to "grindhouse" aesthetics, the zombies' blood is flying, splattering and splashing everywhere.
So, how is it that our uninfected characters didn't get "turned" with all of those splashy, blood-splattering gun shots to the infected?? Haha can anybody help with this?
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Contestado por jorgito2001
el 15 de febrero de 2022 a las 18:06
Dude, the film has a MISSING REEL for crying out loud! These were made for fun! It takes inspiration from those low budget crapfests from the 70s and early 80s with hilarious FX, really bad plot holes and hilarious dialogue (that was meant to be serious).
Contestado por tmdb53400018
el 15 de febrero de 2022 a las 19:22
Haha I know it's just a film. That plot hole just always bugs me, though... it's like, bigger than J. Lo's rear end
Contestado por tmdb53400018
el 15 de febrero de 2022 a las 23:14
Robert Rodriguez's music enhances that credits sequence to a T.
Contestado por tmdb53400018
el 13 de octubre de 2022 a las 11:42
Ah yes, Rose practically lit up my Blu-ray player.