Meat
Market (2000) Brian Clement.
Much
like ladies who smirkily telegraph their fanny farts, Clement's infamous Canuck
zombie-schlock trilogy remains a no less divisive pleasure.
Being an unrepentantly prurient, pro-bodily functions guy, I'm an
ideal Meat Market consumer! While Clement's splattery S.O.V
references Romero, the crusty make-up evokes the deadlier denizens of
Matul, the attack zombie paradigm has been incrementally shifted by
the forward-thinking usage of NANO-TECH created monsters, and saucy Sapphic vampires. Meat Market's hybridic approach to
the prosaic zombie milieu has much to recommend it. While the
pseudo-Romero shtick is partially alleviated by rampant, slinkily
spandex-clad vamps, the colourful, 'enthusiastically'
dubbed Lucha Libre tribute, Il Diablo Azul provides a zesty
psychotronic addition, so I heartily second the exultant battle cry of
'Viva Il Diablo Azul!!!!'.

That
being said, it might be this brazenly opportunistic appropriation of genre
archetypes that has made others feel less enthusiastic about Meat
Market than I. It is not altogether uncommon for B-Horror's
entertainment value to be derived from bad acting, cliched scenarios,
rudimentary practical FX, and Meat Market certainly doesn't
disappoint, although, it must be noted, some of the conspicuously
Fulci'd Zombies still look good enough to eat! Meat Market remains a
remarkably good value, one-stop shop for all your grisly delicious
B-Zombie indelicacies, freshly plucked brains, gourmet gizzards, and
raw, wholly organic viscera at knock down prices! In an increasingly
nauseating era of fashionista food fads, faux wellness fakery, and
dingy Tik Tok dilettantes, Meat Market's prodigiously bloody, old
school menu of Vegan-unfriendly, aggressively chunk-blown cuisine
proved surprisingly Moorish!