Night of Living Dead (1968) USA
Night of Living Dead Image Cover
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Director:George A. Romero
Studio:Anchor Bay
Producer:Karl Hardman, Russell Streiner
Writer:John A. Russo, George A. Romero
Rating:4
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:6303640370
UPC:0013132987439
Price:$14.99
Awards:1 win
Genre:Horror
Release:1997-10-09
IMDb:0063350
Duration:108
Aspect Ratio:1.85 : 1
Sound:Mono
Languages:English
Features:Black & White
George A. Romero  ...  (Director)
John A. Russo, George A. Romero  ...  (Writer)
 
Bill 'Chilly Billy' Cardille  ...  Field reporter
Charles Craig (II)  ...  
Frank Doak  ...  Scientist
Marilyn Eastman  ...  Helen Cooper
Jack Givens  ...  
Karl Hardman  ...  Harry Cooper
Lee Hartman  ...  
S. William Hinzman  ...  Cemetery Zombie (original and new scenes) (as Bill Heinzman)
Duane Jones  ...  Ben
George Kosana  ...  Sheriff McClelland
A.C. McDonald  ...  Zombie / Posse Member
Judith O'Dea  ...  Barbra
Mark Ricci  ...  Washington scientist
Rudy Ricci  ...  
Paula Richards  ...  
Judith Ridley  ...  Judy
Kyra Schon  ...  Karen Cooper
Samuel R. Solito  ...  Zombie / Posse Member
Keith Wayne  ...  Tom
Charles Craig  ...  Newscaster / Zombie
George A. Romero  ...  Cinematographer
Brian Huckeba  ...  Editor
Comments: They keep coming back in a bloodthirsty lust for HUMAN FLESH!...

Summary: We can hardly imagine how shocking this film was when it first broke into the film scene in 1968. There's never been anything quite like it again, though there have been numerous pale imitations. Part of the terror lies in the fact that it is shot in such a raw and unadorned fashion that it feels like a home movie, and is all the more authentic because of that. It draws us into its world gradually, content to establish a merely spooky atmosphere before leading us through a horrifically logical progression that we hardly could have anticipated. The story is simple: Radiation from a fallen satellite has caused the dead to walk, and hunger for human flesh. Once bitten, you become one of them. And the only way to kill one is by a shot or blow to the head. We follow a group holed up in a small farmhouse who are trying to fend off the inevitable onslaught of the dead. The tension between the members of this unstable, makeshift community drives the film. Night of the Living Dead establishes savagery as a necessary condition of life. Marked by fatality and a grim humor, the film gnaws through to the bone, then proceeds on to the marrow. --Jim Gay