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Night of the Living Dead
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Directed by George A. Romero.
When unexpected radiation raises the dead, a microcosm of Average America has to battle flesh-eating zombies in George A. Romero's landmark cheapie horror film. Siblings Johnny (Russell Streiner) and Barbara (Judith O'Dea) whine and pout their way through a visit to their father's grave in a small Pennsylvania town, but it all takes a turn for the worse when a zombie kills Johnny. Barbara flees to an isolated farmhouse where a family, a teen couple, and a lone man named Ben (Duane Jones) are already holed up. Bickering and panic ensue as the group tries to figure out how best to escape, while hoards of undead converge on the house; news reports reveal that fire wards them off, while a local sheriff-led posse discovers that if you "kill the brain, you kill the ghoul." After a night of immolation and parricide, one survivor is left in the house ... . Romero's grainy black-and-white cinematography and casting of locals emphasize the terror lurking in ordinary life; as in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds (1963), Romero's victims are not attacked because they did anything wrong, and the randomness makes the attacks all the more horrifying. Nothing holds the key to salvation, either, whether it's family, love, or Law. Topping off the existential dread is Romero's then-extreme use of gore, as zombies nibble on limbs and viscera. Initially distributed by a Manhattan theater chain owner, Night, made for about $100,000, was dismissed as exploitation, but after a 1969 re-release, it began to attract favorable attention for scarily tapping into Vietnam-era uncertainty and nihilistic anxiety. By 1979, it had grossed over $12 million, inspired a cycle of apocalyptic splatter films like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), and set the standard for finding horror in the mundane. However cheesy the film may look, few horror movies reach a conclusion as desolately unsettling. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:Little Bundles of ZOMBIE!
by Dr_Gor in Zombie Obsession
loved it.
"[quote user="FroggyBaBe15876"] When I was in Latin class, our teacher told us that the worst possible ghost was a baby ghost, since they were all pissed that their lives just started and then ended so quickly. But what about baby ZOMBIES? Gage in Pet Semetary was pretty scary. And those weird little baby zombies in Silent Hill were creepy as hell. There's also the one in the Dawn of the Dead remake...that was just wrong, though. Ew. Anyway, what other movies have had baby (or little kid) zombies? I can't think of any...oh! Dead Alive, duh. Yeah. Gotta love the baby zombie in that one. [/quote] As long as we're on this subject let us not forget 'Karen Cooper' - the little girl zombie who kills her mother with a trowel and then eats her - in Romero's original NOTLD ... (the little girl in Savini's remake was not so lttle... more of a teenager) ... By the way, if any of you haven't seen one of the 'colorized' versions of this movie you should check it out for this scen ... " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALIEN ...
by SkyPilot in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"bavmotors1, you are hereby declared humanity's ambassador. Your films are the sole cargo of the unmanned spacecraft Image1, which launches this morning. Your proposal: Documentaries are right out because that makes the list no fun. Outside of that what an alien “is” carries such a broad range of possibilities that would alter what one might put on the list. Would the alien be like Alf or Galactus? Eating cats or eating planets? Ultimately every study of human kind will produce more questions than answers so that is where I came from with my list. After the number one pick the rest are in no particular order. Contact. The alien has searched the “big ass sky” to find tiny Earth. Contact relates what the experience is like for human kind. The search for alien life might be the only similar effort the two species share. The question Elanor Arroway asks at the end is one I think we'd hope to get the answer to. You know... as long as we're talking. Blo ... " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by leeroy711 in Filmgaming
liked it.
"[quote user="SkyPilot"] [quote user="leeroy711"] I'd probably just screw with them 1. Delicatessen - yeah, we eat each other 2. Night of the Living Dead - sometimes it gets out of hand 3. American Movie - this is documentary of our president 4. The Doom Generation - another gripping documentary 6. Brazil - and we all lived happily ever after. [/quote] leeroy, part of what I really like about this post is that it jumps from 4 to 6. part of the 'screwing with them' tactic, right? [/quote] Actually it's a well known fact that most extraterrestrials have no concept of the number 5. They simply skip it. If you have four of something it's actually illegal for you to gain only one more, and likewise if you have 6 of something. This is the way of their poeple, I didn't write the rules. " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by SkyPilot in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"[quote user="leeroy711"] I'd probably just screw with them 1. Delicatessen - yeah, we eat each other 2. Night of the Living Dead - sometimes it gets out of hand 3. American Movie - this is documentary of our president 4. The Doom Generation - another gripping documentary 6. Brazil - and we all lived happily ever after. [/quote] leeroy, part of what I really like about this post is that it jumps from 4 to 6. part of the 'screwing with them' tactic, right? " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by leeroy711 in Filmgaming
liked it.
"I'd probably just screw with them 1. Delicatessen - yeah, we eat each other 2. Night of the Living Dead - sometimes it gets out of hand 3. American Movie - this is documentary of our president 4. The Doom Generation - another gripping documentary 6. Brazil - and we all lived happily ever after. " [More]
devomayhandevomayhan I LOVE CLASSICS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ...
by devomayhan in devomayhan Blog
loved it.
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"I love classics a lot and this has to be one of the greatest black and white classics!!! " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash Dept. of Awkward McCain Ad Plac ...
by lopezdash in The Movie Blog
is not interested.
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"McCain campaign ad on Zombie NationThe John McCain campaign would do well to exclude certain sites from its web ad buy. Maybe the philosophy of "cast a wide net" will pay off. Maybe Mark Penn missed a micro-trend somewhere along the way--conservative Horror fanboys.The ad was probably triggered by the keywords, because the original post was about a photoshop contest on SpoutBlog to turn any of the 2008 presidential candidates into a zombie poster for a new "______ Dead" film. (The prize is a George Romero DVD 2-pack, including Diary of the Dead, and the 40th Anniversary edition of Night of the Living Dead).The first entry from Jordan Gray is simply fantastic. It's John McCain starring in "Rhetoric of the Dead."I'll enter the contest over the weekend, but I can't decide between making a "Barack from the Dead" one or something about Ron Paul's zombie army. Originally posted on:Cerebral Politics " [More]
KarinaKarina Photoshop Contest: Presidential ...
by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"In our never-ending quest to find new ways to mock contemporary popular culture whilst celebrating the classics, we bring the first ever (ever!) SpoutBlog Photoshop Contest. We have a George Romero DVD two-pack to give away: a copy of the new Diary of the Dead, and the 40th Anniversary edition of Night of the Living Dead. Here’s the quip from the press release: The NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD 40TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION DVD features a fully restored and remastered version of the original 1968 classic film and bonus materials, overseen by the master himself. This DVD marks George A. Romero’s long legacy with great interviews and multiple featurettes that emphasize the quality of this ultimate horror classic. The DIARY OF THE DEAD DVD bonus features include an optional audio commentary by George A. Romero, character confessions, a making of and the top five Myspace contest shorts. Find out what you have to do to get the discs after the jump. 1. Using the image editing software of your c ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Photoshop Contest: Presidential ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"In our never-ending quest to find new ways to mock contemporary popular culture whilst celebrating the classics, we bring the first ever (ever!) SpoutBlog Photoshop Contest. We have a George Romero DVD two-pack to give away: a copy of the new Diary of the Dead, and the 40th Anniversary edition of Night of the Living Dead. Here’s the quip from the press release: The NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD 40TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION DVD features a fully restored and remastered version of the original 1968 classic film and bonus materials, overseen by the master himself. This DVD marks George A. Romero’s long legacy with great interviews and multiple featurettes that emphasize the quality of this ultimate horror classic. The DIARY OF THE DEAD DVD bonus features include an optional audio commentary by George A. Romero, character confessions, a making of and the top five Myspace contest shorts. Find out what you have to do to get the discs after the jump. 1. Using the image editing software of your c ... " [More]
CinemaRianCinemaRian Night of the Living Dead (1968, ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Night of the Living Dead is one of those movies that is more significant for its influence then for its artistic quality. It was one of the first independent American films to become a hit (sorry, AIP counts as a studio), and it did so without a major distributor, either. It was probably the most graphic horror film ever made up to that point, and is considered by some to be a precursor to the slasher genre. It also directly inspired the seeming thousands of filmmakers who themselves have decided to make a zombie film, with precious few of them any good. Finally, it was one of the first movies that featured a dominant African American male who was not afraid to disagree with whites. It's also, looking at it from a contemporary perspective, pretty by the numbers and melodramatic. The story was old even then – a bunch of diverse characters in conflict with each other are trapped in a safe location, surrounded by danger. The danger here is in the form of zombie ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
When George A. Romero, a Pittsburgh-based director of TV commercials and industrial films, persuaded a few buddies to pitch in some money for a case of film stock so that he could shoot a zombie movie on the weekends, he had no idea that he would forever change the American horror movie. With his first effort, Romero shattered the rules of the horror genre; Night of the Living Dead retained many of the iconic elements of the traditional horror movie, but without the emotional buffering of most films that preceded it. In this film, the good guys didn't win, the monsters became only more powerful, the authority figures protecting us were both dangerous and inept, the source of the contagion was both unexplained and unstoppable, and, as friends and families were pitted against each other, no one got away unscathed. The early films of Herschell Gordon Lewis predated it in putting graphic gore on screen, but while Blood Feast and Two Thousand Maniacs seemed almost comical in their candy-colored carnage, Night's stark black-and-white images of zombies feeding on their human victims possessed a blunt and troubling realism that broke new, stomach-churning ground. And while Night's political allegories are more subtle than those of such later Romero films as The Crazies and Dawn of the Dead, its open distrust of authority and depiction of society on the verge of collapse certainly mark it as a film of the Vietnam era; the grim fate of Duane Jones, the film's sole heroic figure and only African-American, had added resonance with the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X fresh in the minds of most Americans. At a time when most horror movies took the tack that fear could be fun, Night of the Living Dead offered terror without a spoonful of sugar, and the genre would never be the same again. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



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