Joe Bob Briggs gave the film a positive review and called it "a
Night of the Living Dead for the '90s".
Bloody Disgusting rated it 2/5 stars and wrote, "In all fairness, this is hardcore, uncompromising filmmaking. At the same time, Mr. McCrae should perhaps flesh out his ideas a bit more before putting them to film." G. Noel Gross of
DVD Talk called the film "an esoteric zombie odyssey that plods along like a Euro-horror epic punctuated by violent ejaculations of carnage." Writing in
The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic
Peter Dendle said, "Though the premise is fresh and there is a plentiful supply of good raw ideas, the movie is built around character interaction among amateur actors, leaving it scattered and directionless. It lacks sustained tension and resolution, and directs too much energy away from its fascinating conceptual possibilities in favor of trite exploitation concerns". John Patterson, in an analysis of the film for
Dread Central, identifies queer themes in the film. In Patterson's analysis, the zombies represent a challenge to the social order, including
heteronormative concepts of sex and gender, and Susan lashes out at them so violently because she fears this change. It won the best
independent film award at the 1995
Fantafestival. ==References==