Movie · 2013 · Action, Horror, Science Fiction, Thriller · 1h 56m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 3.3/10 (1.7M ratings)
There will come a day when the world we know will end.
Overview
Life for former United Nations investigator Gerry Lane and his family seems content. Suddenly, the world is plagued by a mysterious infection turning whole human populations into rampaging mindless zombies. After barely escaping the chaos, Lane is persuaded to go on a mission to investigate this disease. What follows is a perilous trek around the world where Lane must brave horrific dangers and long odds to find answers before human civilization falls.
Ratings
Curator score: 3.3/10
IMDb: 7.0/10
Letterboxd: 3.20/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 67%
Metacritic: 63
TMDB: 6.8/10
Director
Marc Forster
Production
GK Films, Paramount Pictures, Hemisphere Media Capital, 2DUX², Skydance Media, Plan B Entertainment
Cast
Brad Pitt, Mireille Enos, Daniella Kertesz, James Badge Dale, Ludi Boeken, Matthew Fox, Fana Mokoena, David Morse, Elyes Gabel, Sterling Jerins, Peter Capaldi, Pierfrancesco Favino, Ruth Negga, Moritz Bleibtreu, Abigail Hargrove, Fabrizio Guido, David Andrews, John Gordon Sinclair, Grégory Fitoussi, Jane Perry
Where to watch
Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential
Curator Review
Verdict
A big, propulsive global zombie thriller with strong set pieces and a surprisingly procedural, mission-driven structure. It’s often more exciting than scary, and the third act is less memorable than the opening chaos, but the scale and momentum make it an easy watch for action-horror fans.
Best for
viewers who want fast-moving zombie spectacle
fans of apocalyptic disaster movies
people who prefer polished studio thrills over grim gore
audiences looking for a globe-trotting survival chase
Skip if
you want slow-burn horror or heavy dread
you dislike blockbuster logic and compressed character work
you’re looking for especially graphic zombie carnage
you prefer tightly written survival dramas over spectacle
Overview
World War Z works best as a disaster movie wearing zombie makeup. The opening collapse is the movie’s high point: frantic, huge in scale, and built around the kind of escalating panic that makes a theater feel alive. Once it settles into a travelogue of clues and containment failures, it becomes less terrifying than efficiently entertaining, but it keeps moving with enough urgency to stay watchable.
Worth noting
Brad Pitt gives the film a calm, practical center, which helps offset the script’s thinner character writing. The movie is more interested in logistics, outbreaks, and global response than in lingering on horror, so it plays like a polished emergency-response thriller with undead chaos as the engine.
Bottom line
If you want a zombie film that prioritizes momentum, spectacle, and crowd-pleasing survival beats, this delivers. If you want deeper menace, sharper satire, or more emotional bite, it may feel a little sanitized and uneven by comparison.
Top Letterboxd reviews
COBRARocky (1★) · 6684 likes
Israel is literally destroyed because the Muslims made too much noise.
This is an actual scene in the film.
rach (3.5★) · 6034 likes
tag yourself: i'm the guy that slipped and died
Karlie (3.5★) · 3897 likes
When the zombie apocalypse comes, I really hope they aren't fast zombies. Fuck fast zombies.
james💫 (2★) · 3117 likes
this is one of those films that every straight man loves
demi adejuyigbe (3.5★) · 1919 likes
Brad Pitt runs from zombies for two hours, and looks back every time to ponder stuff while keeping a steady pace with everyone running around him.
A mainstream apocalypse thriller with a lone-survivor structure, big-scale emptiness, and a similarly glossy studio approach to end-of-the-world horror.