Shaun of the Dead star Simon Pegg explains why the zombie comedy movie should never be rebooted. Released in 2004, Shaun of the Dead hails from director Edgar Wright, with Pegg and Nick Frost starring as two slackers whose bland lives are disrupted by a zombie apocalypse. Love for the movie remains strong all these years later, especially since Pegg, Wright, and Frost would go on to enjoy other successful collaborations with Hot Fuzz (2007) and The World’s End (2013), with the three films collectively known as the Cornetto Trilogy.

In a recent interview with THR, Pegg is asked to share his feelings on a potential Shaun of the Dead reboot, and he is firmly against the idea. The actor explains that the 2004 film was actually very closely tied to aspects of his real life (and the lives of Wright and Frost) at the time, and that rebooting it with the same title would be “cynical and exploitative.” Check out Pegg’s full comment below:

“I mean, Universal [Pictures] owns it. If they choose to reboot it, then they can if they want I guess. Although Edgar and I would be incensed. (Laughs.)

Shaun of the Dead is incredibly personal. There’s so much of us in that film. The whole joke of Ed and Shaun not being able to ever come out of The Winchester was real. That was about Nick and I, that was about our decision to just stay in a North London pub.

“Edgar was always in town. He was always in Soho, and he always wanted us to come into town and hang out at [London private members’ club] The Groucho, and we never did. We always wanted to be in The Shepherds [pub]. My girlfriend, now my wife, was the same. She was like, “Are we going to The Shepherds again?” That inspired that whole storyline.

“The whole thing with Shaun’s mum, the stepdad, I had a problematic relationship with my stepfather. It was Edgar’s idea to kill the mum. I couldn’t believe it when he said that, but it was the best decision.

“There’s so much of our own heart and soul in that film. If someone was to reboot it, it would be a cynical and exploitative exercise. I would hope that people are in love with our Shaun enough to resist a reboot. Gary King [Pegg’s character in The World’s End] as well, that was a lot about my own alcoholism. A really personal film.

“And the thought of anyone just nicking the title … I always got annoyed at Zack Snyder’s Dawn of the Dead remake — it’s a great movie. It’s really exciting. But I hated the fact they called it Dawn of the Dead, because that was George [Romero]’s film. They could have called it Deadish, which was a great line in the film that one of the actors used, and it still would have been a great film, but when you just take a title because people recognize it, it’s so disrespectful to the original.”

Simon Pegg Is Right About A Shaun Of The Dead Reboot

Why A New Take On The Edgar Wright Film Wouldn’t Work

In addition to rejecting the idea of a reboot, Pegg has also previously been vocal that Shaun of the Dead 2 shouldn’t happen. Clearly, any attempt to capture that same magic in the bottle would be a major challenge all these years later, whether Pegg reprises his role as Shaun or if an entirely new creative team and set of actors reboots the story. Pegg and Frost, after all, are a major reason why Shaun of the Dead worked so well, and replacing them with new actors seems like an impossible task.

A collage image of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost In Hot Fuzz and Shaun of the Dead -created by Tom Russell

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It’s not just Pegg and Frost’s chemistry that made the movie sing, however, but the synergy between the two actors and Wright. Wright has a unique visual style and comedic sensibility as a director that also comes through in Hot Fuzz and The World’s End. Bringing in a new director without these qualities would almost certainly result in a film that lacks that same spark, momentum, and laughs.

The story in Shaun of the Dead could certainly be repeated, but the film’s story is only one small part of why the movie worked so well. As reinforced by Hot Fuzz and The World’s End, there’s something electric that happens when Wright, Pegg, and Frost work together, and this kind of chemistry would just be impossible to recapture with a different director and actors. Thankfully, however, there’s been no word of any Shaun of the Dead reboot being in the works.

Source: THR

Shaun of the Dead

R
Horror
Comedy

Where to Watch

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From director Edgar Wright, Shaun of the Dead stars Simon Pegg as Shaun, an ambitionless slacker who one day finds his world overrun by zombies. From a script by Wright and Pegg, Shaun of the Dead injects comedy into a typically horror-focused subgenre as Shaun and his lazy friend Ed (Nick Frost) attempt to rescue Shaun’s estranged girlfriend and make it through the apocalypse unscathed.

Director

Edgar Wright

Release Date

September 24, 2004

Studio(s)

Universal Pictures

Distributor(s)

Universal Pictures

Writers

Simon Pegg
, Edgar Wright

Cast

Kate Ashfield
, Nick Frost
, Simon Pegg
, Lucy Davis
, Dylan Moran

Runtime

99 minutes

Budget

$6.1 million