Back from the Dead
Remakes of the Romero Zombie Films as Markers of Their Times
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About the Book
Since 1968, the name of motion picture director George Romero has been synonymous with the living dead. His landmark film Night of the Living Dead formed the paradigm of modern zombie cinema; often cited as a metaphor for America during the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights movement, the film used the tenets of the drive-in horror movie genre to engage the sociophobics of late–1960s culture. Subsequently Romero has created five more zombie films, and other directors, including Tom Savini and Zack Snyder, have remade Romero’s movies. This survey of those remakes examines ways in which the sociocultural contexts of different time periods are reflected by changes to the narrative (and the zombies) of Romero’s original versions.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr.
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 252
Bibliographic Info: bibliography, filmography, index
Copyright Date: 2011
pISBN: 978-0-7864-4642-1
eISBN: 978-0-7864-8721-9
Imprint: McFarland
Series: Contributions to Zombie Studies
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vi
Introduction: The Dead Are Rising 1
I. Night
1. “We may not enjoy living together, but dying together isn’t going to solve anything”:
Night of the Living Dead (1968) 29
2. “I’m fighting; I’m not panicking”:
Night of the Living Dead (1990) 47
3. “This has got to be the strangest load you’ve ever hauled!”:
30th Anniversary Special Edition (1998) and Children of the Living Dead (2001) 64
4. “Hey, are you, like, freaked out about zombie movies?”:
Night of the Living Dead 3-D (2006) 78
5. “Now you better watch this and try to understand what’s going on”:
Night of the Living Dead: Survivor’s Cut (2005)
Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated (2009)
Night of the Living Dead: Origins (2011) 94
INTERLUDE: LIVING DEAD, LIVE!
Night of the Living Dead on Stage and in Other Media 103
II. Dawn
6. “We’re blowing it ourselves”:
Dawn of the Dead (1978) 121
7. “Number One: Trust”:
Dawn of the Dead (2004) 136
INTERLUDE: “DID YOU KNOW THAT MOVIE WAS BASED ON A TRUE CASE?”
Return of the Living Dead (1985) 154
III. Day
8. “From now on, everyone is under martial law!”:
Day of the Dead (1985) 171
9. “Somebody will come. They have to”:
Day of the Dead (2008) 187
IV. Back for the Dead
10. “Isn’t that what we’re doing? Pretending to be alive?”:
Land, Diary, Surviving and the World of the Dead 201
Conclusion 226
Filmography 231
Bibliography 235
Index 241
Book Reviews & Awards
“analyzes the zombie films of George Romero and their remakes by other directors in order to see how the shifting ecology of the undead over time resonates with the audience’s fear of war, terrorism, social malaise, and spiritual apocalypse…Wetmore’s close reading of these films weds the passion of a fanboy with the objectivity of an academic and results in a dissection that is both insightful and entertaining.”—C&RL News; “intelligently written, thoroughly researched and immediately engaging…will interest and enthrall anyone from the casual observer to the hardcore zombie enthusiast”—Scarlet; “an engaged account”—Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts.