The Elixir (2025) Review - A Fight Between Life and Death?

When I started The Elixir, my first thought was, “Herbal cure plus zombies sounds like a fun horror combo.” But this is not a typical zombie movie. It mixes family pain, business greed, and the side effects of a miracle treatment into a dark storm. And yes, the gore and action are not shy at all.
Synopsis
A once-estranged family reunites at the home of Sadimin, who runs a herbal-medicine company. He creates an experimental elixir that promises youth. After taking a dose, his face looks younger and his skin clears up, but the win is short lived. The elixir turns him into a zombie. In the chaos he bites a house servant, panic spreads, and the infection begins to move through the area. The family, who could barely speak to each other before, must now fight side by side to stay alive while facing the awful truth that the cure they made is the cause of their nightmare.
Trailer
First impressions
The opening hooked me. I liked how the film ties the outbreak directly to one man’s choice. Sadimin’s quick transformation is shocking, and the first attack sets the tone. Soon after, the servant he bit also turns, and the mayhem spills out into the village. From there it becomes a survival story with arguments, split decisions, and a family trying to protect each other when they used to avoid each other. The drama, action, and emotion arrive together, and that mix kept me watching.

What worked ✅
- Family core: The strongest part is the family bond. Sadimin’s love, his regret, and the way the others rally around each other make this more than virus plus chase scenes.
- Zombie effects: Practical makeup and gore look solid. Zombies feel like a real threat, not just pale faces in the background.
- Energy in set pieces: Attacks, chases, and close-quarters fights have punch. Several sequences hit hard and keep the pace up.
- Idea with bite: Science, profit, and consequences colliding with tradition is a good theme for a zombie story. It gives the blood and guts a reason to matter.
What did not work ❌
- Questionable choices: Characters sometimes act without thinking, which breaks the realism of survival.
- Long runtime and side plots: At about 116 minutes, there are many threads, but not all of them pull in the same direction. Some action beats repeat, so the tension softens.
- Shallow backstories: The past of a few key people is thin, so their decisions do not always land with full weight.
Inconsistent flow: The film often jumps into run-and-chase mode, which leaves the richer horror and character bonding undercooked. - Rough edges in sound and cuts: A few audio cues feel off and some edits are abrupt, which clip the mood.

My opinion
While watching, I felt two kinds of fear at once. There is fear of zombies, and there is fear of human weakness. Sadimin’s decision feels like a man bringing his own doom with his own hands. When his family stands against what he has become, you can see both love and pain. The action gets the heart racing. Bail-out escapes, blood splatter, and tight chases deliver the classic zombie rush, with an emotional twist on top. Still, a few lines and choices made me think, “Why are you not planning better.” I wanted someone to stop, breathe, and choose smarter. Even so, the moments where the family pulls together touched me. That is when the “cure plus zombie” concept feels meaningful, not just messy.
Final verdict
The Elixir is an ambitious zombie film that handles gore and action well and catches a few emotional beats along the way. It will make you feel fear and a little sadness too. If you want a horror piece with a cultural angle, strong practical effects, and lively battle scenes, give it a try. If you need a tight, character-driven story where people act logically and every plot thread stays sharp, you may feel disappointed. I'd give it a solid 3 out of 5. It's decently enjoyable, you should check it out.
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Posted using CineTV