My quick rating - 5.5/10. This one wasn't exactly what I was expecting. We Bury the Dead is a movie that shows up wearing a “zombie horror” name badge, then spends the entire runtime insisting it’s actually here for your feelings. I mean, honestly? That’s mostly fine, just don’t come in expecting wall-to-wall carnage ala 28 Years Later or Romero-style apocalypse chaos, because this is very much a slow, dramatic character piece. It just happens to have the undead lurking around like an emotional support threat.
The opening does a solid job setting the tone, hinting at a world that’s unsettled and strained without going full end-times. The film wisely keeps the disaster contained. This isn’t the fall of humanity, just a very bad, very specific situation. Ava (Daisy Ridley), grieving and lost, enters a quarantine zone to search for her missing husband. The military line is that the dead are “harmless,” which should immediately trigger your internal horror-movie lie detector. Still, the film never lets the zombies be the undead as escalating threats in the way the marketing suggests. That part of the summary flat-out doesn’t happen.
Ava quickly gets paired with Clay (Brenton Thwaites), an Aussie with a relaxed moral code, a stolen motorcycle, and zero hesitation about heading down the coast to help a stranger chase closure. Their dynamic works well, largely because Thwaites brings an easy-going energy that offsets Ava’s quiet grief. The Tasmanian locations are a huge plus, too. The cinematography really lets the landscape breathe, making the isolation feel earned rather than convenient.
This is very much a “what we will do for love” story, and that theme is hammered home hard. Maybe a bit too hard. The flashbacks meant to justify Ava’s dangerous quest don’t exactly scream “risk your life against zombies for this guy,” which makes some of her choices feel more stubborn than romantic. Still, Ridley sells it. She carries the entire movie, evolving from withdrawn and fragile to absolutely feral when pushed far enough. When she starts beating a zombie senseless, I thought she should save some for the husband.
The zombies themselves are more unsettling than frightening. The jaw noises - crunch, crackle, wet icky business - are genuinely nasty and easily the creepiest element. Attacks are rare, which makes you question the film’s own mythology. If the dead rise due to “unfinished business,” does that mean they already failed to kill someone and had to come back for round two? The movie doesn’t care to explain, and neither should you if you want to stay sane.
There’s a mean streak running through the story, and while one major revelation feels predictable, the film seems convinced it’s pulling the rug out from under you. The ending, though, is where it really lost me. That uplifting “humanity survives, hope endures” finale felt unnecessary and toothless after all that bleak introspection. Sometimes it’s okay to end on a bruise.

Zak Hilditch swings big here, delivering a distinctly Aussie take on the zombie genre that prioritizes mood and grief over gore. It’s well-acted, well-shot, and thoughtfully made. Just mislabeled. This isn’t horror. It’s a zombie drama-thriller that moves slowly, thinks a lot, and occasionally trips.
https://jackmeat.com/we-bury-the-dead-2026/




