Tag: horror

  • The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 5: Diary of the Dead

    The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 5: Diary of the Dead

    This is not an opinion you’re likely to find anywhere else on the internet, but we are prepared to argue that Diary of the Dead is one of the best of the entire George A. Romero zombie cycle. It sports the best special effects, is the least repetitive or trigger-happy, and is a welcome return…

  • The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 4: Land of the Dead

    The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 4: Land of the Dead

    George A. Romero’s sporadic zombie flicks are sometimes decades apart in production, but nevertheless form a chronological sequence telling the story of the downfall of society from every angle. Night of the Living Dead (1968) is set in the early days, with a few random civilians trapped in a farmhouse. Dawn of the Dead (1979)…

  • The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 3: Day of the Dead

    The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 3: Day of the Dead

    Day of the Dead (1985) is the third episode in George A. Romero’s continuing tale of civilization’s collapse in the event of a global zombie epidemic. This and the big-budget Land of the Dead (2005) are tied for the worst entries in the series. What makes the first two (Night and Dawn) of merit is…

  • The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 2: Dawn of the Dead

    The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 2: Dawn of the Dead

    Zombie godfather George A. Romero waited more than a decade to create Dawn of the Dead, the first sequel in his zombie cycle that would eventually number five (soon to be six) installments. Night of the Living Dead was marketed under the tagline “They won’t stay dead,” which beautifully told audiences all they needed to…

  • The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 1: Night of the Living Dead

    The George A. Romero Zombie Cycle Part 1: Night of the Living Dead

    I haven’t had the pleasure of seeing what is now recognized as the first zombie movie ever made: White Zombie (1932), starring none other than Bela Lugosi. But arguably, George A. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead (1968) is the actual zombie urtext. It preceded the first of its four official sequels by almost a…

  • Death Has No Dominion in Steven Soderbergh’s Solaris

    Death Has No Dominion in Steven Soderbergh’s Solaris

    As a huge title card reads immediately at the end of the film, Solaris was “written for the screen and directed by Steven Soderbergh.” I am a big admirer, but that seemed a bit egotistical even to me. Perhaps an overenthusiastic end-credits designer is to blame? Or maybe the studio wanted to capture some more…

  • Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solyaris (Solaris) is Vertigo in Space

    Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solyaris (Solaris) is Vertigo in Space

    The opening credits of Andrei Tarkovsky’s 1972 film Solyaris state it is “based on the science fiction by Stanislaw Lem.” It’s perhaps telling that the term “science fiction” is used in place of simply “novel.” This faint hint of apology may hint at a lack of respect for the original Polish novel or the entire…

  • Thinning the Herd: M. Night Shyamalan’s The Happening

    Thinning the Herd: M. Night Shyamalan’s The Happening

    The Happening is the latest in a long line of light entertainments that depict attacks of one sort (terrorist) or another (alien) upon New York City. A mysterious mass hysteria strikes the idyllic Bethesda Terrace (a place I walk through several times a week) in Manhattan’s Central Park, and quickly fans out to the entire…

  • There’s Something in the Mist: Frank Darabont’s The Mist

    There’s Something in the Mist: Frank Darabont’s The Mist

    Has writer/director Frank Darabont been weighed down by the heavy legacy of his first feature film? The Shawshank Redemption remains one of the most popular movies ever made, if not quite (yet?) accepted into the canon. The Mist, after The Green Mile, is Darabont’s third Stephen King adaptation, so far only having made only one…

  • Hey, at least it was only 86 minutes long: AVP:R – Aliens vs. Predator – Requiem

    Hey, at least it was only 86 minutes long: AVP:R – Aliens vs. Predator – Requiem

    Ridley Scott’s original Alien is one of the most effective and influential horror films ever made, and a personal favorite of mine, with no apologies. Its art direction and visual aesthetic were so far ahead of their time that pretty much only the hairstyles have dated, but the real keys to its longevity are its…