Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray]

Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray]
by George A. Romero

Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray]
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DVD details

Actor: Jim Christopher, Pan Chatfield, Sharon Ceccatti, Ted Bank, Tony Buba
Director: George A. Romero
Brand: Anchorbay
Cinematographer: Michael Gornick
Cinematographer: Michael Cornick
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Original Language)
Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen
Picture Format: 1.85:1
Running Time: 127 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2007-10-02
Audience Rating: Unrated
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay

DVD Reviews of Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray]

DVD Review: Ode to Dawn of the Dead
Summary: 5 Stars

George A. Romero discovered a universal truth: Zombies rock. What's not to love? Shambling, animated corpses with a taste for living flesh? Desperate survivors with trigger happy fingers decapitating said zombies with rusty machetes or well-aimed head shots? Zombies piling up like chords of wood? And the screaming!

It's like Christmas at the organ donor shop.

Romero's original "Dawn of the Dead" made in 1978 is a lot of things: horrifying, taboo-shattering, gory, and disturbing. It's also horror camp at its finest - skewering the mass consumer culture of the United States in our most shallow of decades: the 1970s.

Romero has a gleefully good time with his pack of survivors holed up in an indoor shopping mall. The slow-moving zombies that bang into the display cases or stumble up the escalators aren't so far removed from normal everyday mall shoppers - at least according to Romero.

Why do the zombies congregate at the mall? "Some kind of instinct. Memory, of what they used to do. This was an important place in their lives," one of the characters informs us.

Yeah, even dead we like buying stuff at the mall.

But one thing the Romero film is not? Scary.

That's one reason why we're also fans of the much maligned 2004 remake by director Zack Snyder. That's a sacrilege in many quarters, but for pure fright - Snyder tops Romero. That's the truth. Romero's low-budget wonder is a classic - no doubt. It can be uncomfortable to watch, but there is more dark humor than actual chills. Romero focused his film on his wicked wit: satire instead of terror.

Snyder isn't interested in delivering a sardonic message. He wants to scare you. And damn it if he doesn't. His zombies - like the times we live in - are fast. There's no shambling here - but straight out sprinting.

The gem of Snyder's movie is the opening 10 minutes. It may be the most frightening sequence of any horror movie made over the last 20 years. It has a disjointed, sour flavor as if the orange juice you drink every morning has been spiked with cyanide.

Sarah Polley plays a nurse named Ana. She's at the end of a difficult shift at the hospital. All she wants to do is go home. Traveling home over washed out streets in a bland suburban tract, she arrives home for "date night" with her husband. They make love in their messy, little bed in their messy, little house.

Then it all goes to hell.

The little girl next door wonders in and lo and behold the lower half of her face has been chewed off. She creeps into the bedroom and Ana's husband jumps up concerned. But before he can react, she takes a bite of flesh out of his neck.

Ana locks the little girl out of the bedroom and then has a grueling life and death struggle as her husband dies and then reanimates as a zombie. It's bone rattling violence and by the time Ana gets into her car - her neighborhood, her world is in chaos.

It's absolutely chilling.

While the overall Snyder's film doesn't quite live up to the original (and the characters make some ridiculous decisions - especially at the end), Snyder delivers a zombie movie that belongs on the list of greatest undead flicks ever made - with Romero's original and the superb "28 Days Later."

The two movies follow the same premise - but are very different movies. That's why you can enjoy them both: turn to Romero for the horrifying satire (you can often overlook the rather awkward acting) and then lean on Snyder for some in-your-face terror (and for using Johnny Cash's "Man Comes Around" as an opening number).

Either way -- it's a great two for one.

Like undead literate blather? Then plodded on over to the Dark Party Review.

DVD Review: Dawn of the Dead
Summary: 5 Stars

I recived this dvd in two days I am very happy with my purchase
John.....

DVD Review: If you love Blu-Ray and Zombies...
Summary: 5 Stars

... you will love this movie! Come on... it is Dawn of the Dead! Need I say more... I think not.

DVD Review: Dawn of the Dead
Summary: 4 Stars

I doubt most of todays audience will appreciate this as much as those that saw it at the theater, but it still has a cult following for good reason. George A. Romero was the master at Zombie movies. Sure the makeup job on this could have been better but considering his budget for his B movies, he did remarkably well. This is one of my favorites with the shopping mall as their hideout from the dead. The remake is pretty good too, but you have to see this original to fully appreciate it. Good quality DVD with extras. If you enjoyed this catch "Day of the Dead".

CA Luster

DVD Review: King Zombie
Summary: 5 Stars

Not only is DOTD the greasted Zombie film, ever, bar none, it may be one of the greatest horror films, and is good enough to stand up to other great films of ANY genre.

Modern day critics have blasted the '70's soundtrack, FX, and shambling, seemingly harmless Zombies. As to the '70's, it was made in the '70's, which was a seminal time for Horror. Those slow moving Zombies may seem harmless, but they are relentless-Let your guard down for a second, You're toast. I think Romero was deliberate in this, as in some scenes, after the Mall is secured, you forget all about them, yet they are still outside, mindlessly and patiently waiting for their chance to get back in. Fast moving Zombies will never have the same menace.

The script is a good one, with fine performances by it's four lead actors, but Ken Foree is the heart and soul of the film. The scene where he confronts Stephen (Flyboy) with a loaded weapon is simply brilliant, as is the nightmarish scene in the basement of the Tenement where he dispatches the undead.

The gore-Yes it shows it's age, but it's still painfully cringe-inducing.

The Humour-Bikers versus Zombies in a pie fight. Ludicrous, yet it cuts the unbelievably tense atsmophere, sort of like Craven did in "Last house on the Left". A welcome respite.

Overall, very strong writing, direction, and acting. The relationships the protagonist develop are quite believable and complex, and when two of them meet their demise, it is very emotional.

An incredible classic, depressing, funny, tense, and thought provoking film. Totally worth the price.

Description of Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray]

Studio: Starz/sphe Release Date: 10/02/2007 Run time: 91 minutes Rating: R
Are you ready to get down with the sickness? Movie logic dictates that you shouldn't remake a classic, but Zack Snyder's Dawn of the Dead defies that logic and comes up a winner. You could argue that George A. Romero's 1978 original was sacred ground for horror buffs, but it was a low-budget classic, and Snyder's action-packed upgrade benefits from the same manic pacing that energized Romero's continuing zombie saga. Romero's indictment of mega-mall commercialism is lost (it's arguably outmoded anyway), so Snyder and screenwriter James Gunn compensate with the same setting--in this case, a Milwaukee shopping mall under siege by cannibalistic zombies in the wake of a devastating viral outbreak--a well-chosen cast (led by Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Jake Weber, and Mekhi Phifer), some outrageously morbid humor, and a no-frills plot that keeps tension high and blood splattering by the bucketful. Horror buffs will catch plenty of tributes to Romero's film (including cameos by three of its cast members, including gore-makeup wizard Tom Savini), and shocking images are abundant enough to qualify this Dawn as an excellent zombie-flick double-feature with 28 Days Later, its de facto British counterpart. --Jeff Shannon

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