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Jul '17
The king of zombies has fallen to the hands of lung cancer. He was in the middle of developing some more zombie stuff too. As the years went on, his movies were noticably less awesome than they were pre-90s, but he was a great director, an even greater writer, and when he made a movie, he went all out. Just imagine how insane it was back to employ so many extras, to play walking corpses! He also starred in his movies, edited them, and had his own style of filmmaking. Directors these days? You can substitute anybody for the director, and the movie would probably feel the same. Filmmakers today don't have the passion that this guy did, and you can tell that from the behind the scenes stuff.

TOP 5:
Martin (1977) - I'd read that Romero considers this his best film. It's certainly the one that stuck with me the most.
Dawn of the Dead (1978) - This movie was cool as fuck. The characters, the plot, the progression, the music, everything.
Night of the Living Dead (1968) - The one that started it all. It's a perfect (public domain) movie to put on for any horror occasion.
Creepshow (1982) - The perfect horror anthology, with a star studded cast.
Day of the Dead (1985) - More moody zombie shit with wonderful gore.

Too bad I didn't meet him at the conventions. I probably should've bit the bullet and paid the big bucks and waited the long lines, but oh well. My late teen years were dedicated to finding more George Romero movies to watch.

I never understood why he included his middle initial A in his name. When someone says "George Romero", we all know they're talking about this guy, because he's the only one that counts.

RIP - George A. Romero

Without googling it, do you know what the A. stands for? Answer: Andrew


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Tommix says:
#8, Reply to #6

Jul '17
Maybe "Dawn of the Apes"...? Or, one of those parody titles like Dawn of the Planet of the Night of the Living Dead Apes, I guess.


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Tommix says:
#7

Jul '17
I can't believe we have to do this thread. How can he be gone.

I pretty much agree with what you said. For me personally, I thought Land of the Dead was possibly his best one from this century... overall, he clearly went into a decline as time went by, but I mostly enjoyed that movie, and I appreciate what he tried to do with it.

Dawn of the Dead 1978 is tremendous. It might be the movie I have rewatched the most, in my life... have to think about that, but I bet it's close.



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