Zombeavers (2014) is a low-budget American horror-comedy directed by Jordan Rubin and co-written with Jon and Al Kaplan. Produced by Wayne Rice and starring Huntingdon College acting students and genre regulars, the film riffs on creature-feature tropes by replacing traditional monsters with undead beavers. It intentionally blends camp, slapstick gore, and B-movie sensibilities to deliver an intentionally ridiculous premise aimed at viewers who enjoy tongue-in-cheek horror.
: The absurdity of a "zombie beaver" transcends cultural barriers, relying on physical comedy and universal horror tropes that translate well regardless of the viewing platform. available for Zombeavers or more details on its practical effects production zombeavers filmyzilla
A group of college friends heads to a riverside cabin for a weekend getaway. After an initial encounter with a diseased beaver and contaminated water, several beavers mutate into aggressive, undead predators. The friends are picked off through a series of increasingly outlandish set pieces involving gnawing, mauling, and improbable gore. The survivors attempt to fight back using improvised traps, gasoline, and conventional slasher-film tactics, culminating in large-scale destruction and a finale that preserves the film’s tongue-in-cheek tone. : The absurdity of a "zombie beaver" transcends
: The human cast consists of archetypes meant to be fodder. You won't find deep character development here; they exist mainly to be chased. One-Note Joke The friends are picked off through a series