When the Dead Rise, Even the Mossad Gets a Headache
Every country gets the zombie movie it deserves. The Americans gave us consumerist malls and Dawn of the Dead. The British gave us hangovers and Shaun of the Dead. Now Israel gives us Cannon Fodder — a gloriously bloody, politically incorrect, and surprisingly funny entry in the undead genre.
Directed by Eitan Gafny, this 2013 film proudly bills itself as “Israel’s first full-length zombie movie.” It’s part horror, part war thriller, and part geopolitical fever dream, featuring Mossad operatives, Hezbollah terrorists, and enough headshots to make George A. Romero kvell in his grave. If you’ve ever wanted to see what happens when Middle Eastern politics meet The Walking Dead, this is your moment.
The Plot: Mission Improbable
Our hero, Doron (Liron Levo), is a battle-hardened Israeli security operative on his “final mission.” You know what that means — the movie equivalent of saying “I’ll be right back.” Doron is sent into Lebanon to capture Manzur, a high-ranking Hezbollah operative, so he can retire in peace with his new wife and maybe finally buy that condo in Haifa.
But this isn’t your typical counter-terrorism op. The mission quickly goes to hell — literally — when Doron and his team discover that the sleepy Lebanese village they’ve infiltrated is swarming not with jihadists but with zombies. That’s right: the dead have risen, and they’re not interested in politics — just protein.
Soon Doron teams up with Noelle (Yafit Shalev), the daughter of his target, who claims her father was actually collaborating with Israel on a biological weapon gone very, very wrong. Cue the ethical debates, gunfire, and the occasional heartfelt conversation about love, death, and whether a headshot counts as diplomacy.
From the Holy Land to the Unholy Dead
One of the film’s greatest strengths is its audacity. It’s not content to just throw zombies at the screen; it throws geopolitics, cultural tension, and a dash of absurd humor into the mix. Imagine World War Z rewritten by someone who once had to serve in the IDF and then took a film class after discharge.
It’s a heady blend of military jargon, moral ambiguity, and relentless gore. Every firefight is loaded — not just with bullets, but with meaning. The soldiers move through bombed-out Lebanese streets where the enemy might be a militant, a civilian, or an undead soldier wearing a keffiyeh.
In lesser hands, this setup might feel exploitative. But Gafny balances it with a sense of grim humor and self-awareness. The film never forgets that it’s a zombie flick first and a political metaphor second. The result is something refreshingly bold — and occasionally insane.
Liron Levo: Israel’s Answer to Bruce Campbell
Liron Levo anchors the film with the kind of gruff charisma that would make any B-movie hero proud. He’s got the square jaw, the thousand-yard stare, and the kind of weary determination that says, “I’ve killed too many terrorists to be scared of zombies.”
Levo plays Doron like an Israeli Ash Williams — stoic, sarcastic, and surprisingly human. He’s a man who just wants to go home but keeps getting dragged into the apocalypse. Watching him switch from tactical precision to panicked zombie-slaying feels weirdly satisfying. When he delivers lines like “We’re not fighting terrorists anymore — we’re fighting something worse,” you can’t help but grin.
Yafit Shalev, as Noelle, brings emotional depth to the carnage. She’s not just a damsel in distress; she’s a scientist’s daughter, a reluctant ally, and a voice of reason in a sea of gunfire. Her chemistry with Levo keeps the story grounded — at least, as grounded as it can be in a movie where Hezbollah and the undead share screen time.
The Undead Are Always Political
Let’s be honest — a zombie outbreak in the Middle East is both a brilliant and hilariously risky premise. Cannon Fodderwalks that tightrope with remarkable balance. The undead don’t represent one side or the other; they represent the futility of endless war. It’s not Israel versus Lebanon, or IDF versus Hezbollah — it’s the living versus the dead, and everyone’s losing.
When Doron’s squad realizes their enemies are reanimating faster than they can shoot them, the film flirts with satire. “You can’t kill what’s already dead” takes on a dark double meaning in a region that’s been fighting the same battles for decades.
But Gafny wisely keeps things from getting preachy. He knows we came for blood, not political philosophy — though if you want to read meaning into the sight of a soldier blowing the head off an undead insurgent, the movie won’t stop you.
A Love Letter to B-Movies (and Headshots)
For a debut, Cannon Fodder looks great. Gafny’s direction is confident and kinetic. The cinematography makes strong use of desaturated tones and claustrophobic settings, giving the film a gritty authenticity that feels both military and macabre.
The special effects, while modest, are delightfully practical. The zombies are a mix of makeup, fake blood, and creative lighting — no lazy CGI hordes here. When someone gets bitten, shot, or exploded, you feel it. There’s a certain joy in seeing practical gore done right — the kind that makes you nostalgic for old-school horror.
And then there’s the humor. It’s dry, it’s dark, and it’s distinctly Israeli. The characters banter like people who’ve seen too much and stopped believing in miracles years ago. At one point, a soldier mutters, “Of course it’s zombies. It couldn’t just be a regular terrorist cell.” You laugh, then immediately feel guilty for laughing. That’s the sweet spot Cannon Fodderthrives in.
Zombies, Bullets, and Existential Angst
Beyond the action, Cannon Fodder has something deeper lurking in its bloodstream. It’s a movie about soldiers who’ve spent their lives fighting the “enemy,” only to realize the real enemy is something they can’t kill — fear, trauma, guilt, or maybe the very concept of conflict itself.
When Doron faces down a horde of undead militants, you can almost see the metaphor: violence begets violence, war never dies, and sometimes the dead walk because the living won’t stop killing each other. It’s profound, if you let it be — but even if you don’t, it’s still a hell of a ride.
Final Stand at the Border of Sanity
As the climax unfolds — bullets flying, zombies swarming, and Doron trying to keep his humanity intact — the movie delivers exactly what you came for: chaos, carnage, and a faint glimmer of hope. Gafny doesn’t overstay his welcome; he knows when to hit you with one last splatter of gore and call it a day.
By the end, Doron’s dream of peace looks about as realistic as a zombie ceasefire, but somehow, you’re still rooting for him. Maybe that’s the real triumph of Cannon Fodder — it takes a premise that should be ridiculous and turns it into something oddly sincere.
Final Verdict: Holy Land of the Dead
Cannnon Fodder isn’t just “Israel’s first zombie movie.” It’s a wickedly entertaining, politically charged, blood-soaked genre cocktail that proves horror can thrive anywhere — even between borders and barbed wire.
It’s clever without being pretentious, brutal without being joyless, and funny in the way only a movie about the apocalypse can be. Eitan Gafny deserves credit for pulling off the impossible: turning global tension into global infection and making it a damn good time.
Rating: 8.5 out of 10 headshots.
Peace on Earth can wait — right now, we’ve got zombies to kill.

