<p>After a decade making some of Hollywood's biggest superhero movies, director Zack Snyder has returned to the monsters who made his name -- zombies, who this time have taken over Las Vegas.</p>.<p>In "<em>Army of the Dead</em>," which hits limited theaters Friday and Netflix May 21, the desert gambling metropolis has been sealed off after being overrun by blood-splattered, flesh-chomping hordes of the undead.</p>.<p>A gun-toting group of mercenaries attempts to infiltrate the city to retrieve millions of dollars from a vault beneath the Strip, with just hours to spare before a nuclear bomb is dropped on Sin City's grisly residents.</p>.<p>For a director who made his name with a 2004 remake of George A. Romero's "<em>Dawn of the Dead</em>" -- which itself satirized rabid consumerism by setting zombies loose in a shopping mall -- it was an easy pitch.</p>.<p>"It's a zombie movie about a gang of zombie killers who go into zombie-infested Vegas to get the money out," Snyder recalled telling the bosses at Netflix.</p>.<p>"So it wasn't like they were like, 'Oh, geez, let's not make that movie. No one wants to see that!'"</p>.<p>But for all its brash, high-octane fun, the movie -- an homage to genre films like "<em>Escape from New York</em>" and "<em>Aliens</em>", and heist movies such as "<em>Ocean's Eleven</em>" -- carries genuine emotional heft for Snyder.</p>.<p>It is his first brand-new film since having to walk away from directing the star-studded DC superhero epic "J<em>ustice League</em>" in 2017 following the suicide of his daughter.</p>.<p>Snyder, 55, dreamt up the idea for a "zombie heist" movie years earlier, but rewrote it to center on the relationship between tough-as-nails father Scott (Dave Bautista) and his estranged daughter Kate (Ella Purnell.)</p>.<p>"As a human being I have evolved from when I made 'Dawn,'" he told a virtual press conference.</p>.<p>"And just having the relationship I have with my children and being a dad... that part of the movie really became a lot more important to me than maybe it was 15 years ago."</p>.<p>He added: "Dave's character is trying to reconnect with his daughter... yes it's a zombie heist movie, but really in the end it's a character movie in a lot of ways."</p>.<p>Of course, other profound changes have hit the world since Snyder began filming "Army of the Dead" in 2019, which lend the film an eerie prescience.</p>.<p>The Covid-19 pandemic brought the 24-hour bright lights and casino floors of Las Vegas -- and Hollywood itself -- to brief standstills, while former president Donald Trump was booted out of office by US voters.</p>.<p>In the movie, Las Vegas refugees are shown quarantined in cages and subjected to random temperature gun checks by brutal guards, while partisan news channels ask, "Quarantine: Truth or Scare?"</p>.<p>The decision to drop a nuclear bomb on Las Vegas on July 4 comes from an unnamed US president who thinks the idea of fireworks on Independence Day would be "really cool" and "patriotic."</p>.<p>"There's been a lot of crazy things that have elevated the movie in some way or other," said Snyder in the film's press notes.</p>.<p>"We wanted to focus on how a zombie plague would affect the disenfranchised and how the government might use something like a zombie plague to take away certain freedoms," he added.</p>.<p>"The interpretations are completely different now from when we first started. But the catch-all for zombie movies is still the same: in the end, humans are worse than zombies."</p>
<p>After a decade making some of Hollywood's biggest superhero movies, director Zack Snyder has returned to the monsters who made his name -- zombies, who this time have taken over Las Vegas.</p>.<p>In "<em>Army of the Dead</em>," which hits limited theaters Friday and Netflix May 21, the desert gambling metropolis has been sealed off after being overrun by blood-splattered, flesh-chomping hordes of the undead.</p>.<p>A gun-toting group of mercenaries attempts to infiltrate the city to retrieve millions of dollars from a vault beneath the Strip, with just hours to spare before a nuclear bomb is dropped on Sin City's grisly residents.</p>.<p>For a director who made his name with a 2004 remake of George A. Romero's "<em>Dawn of the Dead</em>" -- which itself satirized rabid consumerism by setting zombies loose in a shopping mall -- it was an easy pitch.</p>.<p>"It's a zombie movie about a gang of zombie killers who go into zombie-infested Vegas to get the money out," Snyder recalled telling the bosses at Netflix.</p>.<p>"So it wasn't like they were like, 'Oh, geez, let's not make that movie. No one wants to see that!'"</p>.<p>But for all its brash, high-octane fun, the movie -- an homage to genre films like "<em>Escape from New York</em>" and "<em>Aliens</em>", and heist movies such as "<em>Ocean's Eleven</em>" -- carries genuine emotional heft for Snyder.</p>.<p>It is his first brand-new film since having to walk away from directing the star-studded DC superhero epic "J<em>ustice League</em>" in 2017 following the suicide of his daughter.</p>.<p>Snyder, 55, dreamt up the idea for a "zombie heist" movie years earlier, but rewrote it to center on the relationship between tough-as-nails father Scott (Dave Bautista) and his estranged daughter Kate (Ella Purnell.)</p>.<p>"As a human being I have evolved from when I made 'Dawn,'" he told a virtual press conference.</p>.<p>"And just having the relationship I have with my children and being a dad... that part of the movie really became a lot more important to me than maybe it was 15 years ago."</p>.<p>He added: "Dave's character is trying to reconnect with his daughter... yes it's a zombie heist movie, but really in the end it's a character movie in a lot of ways."</p>.<p>Of course, other profound changes have hit the world since Snyder began filming "Army of the Dead" in 2019, which lend the film an eerie prescience.</p>.<p>The Covid-19 pandemic brought the 24-hour bright lights and casino floors of Las Vegas -- and Hollywood itself -- to brief standstills, while former president Donald Trump was booted out of office by US voters.</p>.<p>In the movie, Las Vegas refugees are shown quarantined in cages and subjected to random temperature gun checks by brutal guards, while partisan news channels ask, "Quarantine: Truth or Scare?"</p>.<p>The decision to drop a nuclear bomb on Las Vegas on July 4 comes from an unnamed US president who thinks the idea of fireworks on Independence Day would be "really cool" and "patriotic."</p>.<p>"There's been a lot of crazy things that have elevated the movie in some way or other," said Snyder in the film's press notes.</p>.<p>"We wanted to focus on how a zombie plague would affect the disenfranchised and how the government might use something like a zombie plague to take away certain freedoms," he added.</p>.<p>"The interpretations are completely different now from when we first started. But the catch-all for zombie movies is still the same: in the end, humans are worse than zombies."</p>