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Aka: Laugh Track: Night of the Living Dead
The radiation from a fallen satellite might have caused the recently deceased to rise from the grave and seek the living to use as food. This is the situation that a group of people penned up in an old farmhouse must deal with.
De wereld wordt plotseling overspoeld door een epidemie van levende doden, die zich voeden met de levenden. Een groepje mensen kan zich verschansen in een afgezonderde hoeve. Ze worden doorlopend aangevallen, maar ook van binnenuit groeien de spanningen...
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 (Russ Streiner) and Barbara (Judith O'Dea) whine and pout their way through a graveside visit 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 group of people 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 of...
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f, 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 dollars, 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.
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Night of the Living Dead News Articles
Bill Hinzman , who gained a measure of fame among hardcore horror fans for playing a zombie in George A. Romero ’s 1968 classic Night of the Living Dead , has died of cancer at age 75. Hinzman’s gaunt-faced, lumbering zombie, sometimes referred to as the Graveyard Zombie, makes his indelible appearance in the film’s famous opening cemetery scene, killing the character of Johnny just moments after Johnny has taunted his frightened sister Barbra with the warning, “They’re coming to get you, Barbara.”Following his work in Night of the Living Dead , Hinzman acted and worked behind-the-scenes in other movies, including Romero’s The Crazies,
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