Weekend of the Dead on Monsters HD 6/24 & 6/25

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Sean Mota

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Supporting Founder
Sep 8, 2003
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June 24th:

  • Tombs of the Blind Dead ** (1972, Horror)
  • Return of the Evil Dead ** (1973, Horror)
  • Ghost Ships of the Blind Dead *+ (1974, Horror)
  • The Evil Dead *** (1982, Horror)
  • Bride of Re-Animator ** (1991, Horror)
  • Pet Sematary Two * (1992, Horror)
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June 25th:

  • The Last Man on Earth ** (1964, SciFi)
  • Night of the Living Dead ***+ (1968, Horror)
  • Document of the Dead *** (1989, Doc) Roy Frumkes showcases the career of filmmaker George A. Romero. NR TVMA
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  • Dawn of the Dead ***+ (1978, Horror)
  • Dream of the Dead: The Making of George Romero's Land of the Dead
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  • The Return of the Living Dead *** (1985, Horror)
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  • Dead Alive *** (1992, Horror)
 
Source

Romero's 'Dead' May Rise Again
Fri, Jun 24, 2005, 02:06 PM PT
By Daniel Fienberg

LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com)- "Land of the Dead" arrives in theaters this week almost 20 years to the day after writer-director George Romero seemingly ended his zombie trilogy with the underfunded and underrated "Day of the Dead." It's a sequel that horror fans, industry insiders and even Romero himself assumed would never come.
"Whenever we talked about other projects, everybody always said, 'Do you want to make another zombie film?' and George didn't," says Romero's regular production partner Peter Grunwald. "Not because he wasn't interested in the genre or in the other films -- actually, the other way around. He loves his fans. He likes these films a lot. He just didn't want to do one until he felt he could do it well, until he had something that would make it fresh."

One of cinema's true independent spirits, Romero spent the years after "Day of the Dead" either dedicating his time to interesting, but inferior projects ("Monkey Shines" and "The Dark Half" have fans, but only a handful), or trying to fund a number of more original ideas (like 2000's nearly unreleased "Bruiser").



"I missed the '90s," Romero candidly admits.

At the 21st Century dawned, Romero finally had an idea for a new zombie epic. He wrote it up and sent it around Hollywood, but his timing was off. Just as the script hit studio desks, the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 temporarily changed the way the entertainment business was run, sending Romero's script back to the shelf for nearly two years. After Romero made several minor changes (and after the zombie movie was revitalized by tenuous entries like Danny Boyle's "28 Days Later"), he tried again.

"There a lot of studios that were asking the question, 'Does George still have it?'" recalls producer Bernie Goldmann. "And frankly the only studio that didn't ask that question, that jumped right on board, was Universal, which couldn't have been more thrilled to work with George."

Equipped with a stable and healthy budget (still a bargain basement sum under $20 million), a cast of recognizable faces (including John Leguizamo, Simon Baker and Dennis Hopper) Romero revved up production on "Land of the Dead," which was then rushed into a prime summer release date. After 30 years of revisionist realizations by mainstream critics that the original "Dead" trilogy was a collective masterwork, Romero's "Land" has been earning some of the strongest reviews of his career. After the lengthy delay between zombie movies, Romero sounds prepared to jump back in.

"If this opens strong I might be in a situation where I might have to do another one of these or would be asked to do another one of these right away," he says, a maverick filmmaker somewhat ironically dependent on commercial returns for the very first time.

While early discussion of "Land of the Dead" has lumped it in with "Night of the Living Dead," "Dawn of the Dead" and "Day of the Dead," transforming the sacred trilogy into a sprawling quadrilogy, Romero and his creative team are actually approaching this as the start of something new.

"This film establishes a new set of characters, a slightly different world, and you could actually go from chapter to chapter, from 'Land' to a new one, to a new one, and -- taken as a whole -- those films, the new films, would be one big story," Grunwald says.

As might be expected, "Land of the Dead" ends with a selection of the main characters carrying on the good fight and myriad zombies still roaming the land in search of sweet, sweet brains. Baker, whose brooding mercenary Riley may or may not survive the film, is confident that things are left wide open for "Lake of the Dead" or "Nation of the Dead" or "Our Dead Neighbors to the North."

"Who knows what's going on inside George's head?" Baker ponders rhetorically. "He's probably go things already put together, ideas and stuff. He's Mr. Mysterioso. He doesn't really let too much on. He's a pretty special guy, so I think there's obviously room for it."
 
Monsters HD: Document of the Dead *** (1989, Doc) @ 2:15pm ET

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Monsters HD: Dream of the Dead: The Making of George Romero's Land of the Dead (Special) 6pm ET

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Dream of the Dead: George Romero Excellent documentary about the making of Land of the Dead. I wish it was longer but it was excellent. First thing to notice it was done by IFC and Monsters HD. The movie is a low budget Independent film because Romero does not like to deal with the hollywood bureacracy. It was written 3 days before 9/11 but it was shelled for a period of two years because no one wanted to make these type of movies after 9/11. The guy from Dawn of the Dead who in the Mall cuts off the head of one Zombie, makes it back. Anyway lots of stuff and very interested.
 
Document of the Dead The last half hour is very interested and has the best PQ. It looks like a transfer from film. The rest of the documentary looks like Video upconvertion but it is 1:33:1. The first part of the documentary deals with the making of the Dawn of the Dead and Night of the Living Dead. The last 30 minutes Romero talks about how difficult it has become to be an independent film making. He likes to go independent because most of the hollywood studios are after the money of the film and wnat to introduce their own idea without much input from the producer and takes away from the art of making film. Unfortunately, he said that some of the independent films houses are also suffering from the same sympton as hollywood. Basically when hollywood lends you money for a film, they believe that they own you and therefore they can do whatever they want. It is an interested documentary.
 

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