In short, once a meteorite fell into a swamp. ...and people who somehow found themselves next to him began to turn into zombies.
This is the plot of the dull film “The Death of an Alien”, which is one of the first attempts to direct not only anyone, but Fred Olen Ray himself, who is known among horror fans as the director of multi-mass thrash.
In principle, Ray found himself in a typical situation of a novice horror director - there is relative freedom of action (large studios do not step on their heels, do what you want and how you want - babble!), but there is no budget (no problem, history knows many examples when and without giant funding were born true masterpieces) and fantasies. That's the last Fred in this film really trouble. Another fallen meteorite, another pack of zombies. Tired.
In form and spirit, the tape resembles a cross between the “Night Beast” and the “Mad Dismemberer”, a gift that came out before them. And in its first half, just like the "Beast", the picture is far from perfect, but with grief in half pulls on the average amateur craftsmanship. But in the second half, the disease of the "Mad Dismemberer" manifests itself, and the film instantly deteriorates, acquiring typical "Dismemberment" signs - a minimum of dialogue but a maximum of muddy music (interspersed, however, by cheerful country, so not everything is so bad) and montage on the verge of a foul (as an example - we show a girl swimming on the straits, but from under the water the angle almost from the Mariana Trench).
I deliberately did not mention the actors who did not even try to play (and even the honorable Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers of all States Buster Crabbe, apparently because of severe hunger, starred for a fee of as much as $ 2000) and their dull characters, enthusiastically calling some kind of achy and stubbornly not noticing zombies at arm’s length, because this is at the tape from the very beginning. The zombie makeup, as it should be, is very artisanal. In some places for amateurs in general not bad, but in other cases ... gouache. The one the actors painted when they ran out of makeup money. The 'action' here is predictably ridiculous and ugly, so I'll probably skip that aspect.
What to say in conclusion, I do not know - the usual amateur, hastily removed and mounted on the knee, containing even some no, but nude (although not as spectacular as on the poster). This kind of good and then removed in packs, and now removed. Nothing extraordinary.
4 out of 10