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George A. Romero, ‘Night of the Living Dead’ creator, Dead at 77

Legendary filmmaker George A. Romero, father of the modern movie zombie and creator of the groundbreaking “Night of the Living Dead” franchise, has died at 77, his family said.

Romero died Sunday in his sleep following a “brief but aggressive battle with lung cancer,” according to a statement to The Times provided by his longtime producing partner, Peter Grunwald. Romero died while listening to the score of one his favorite films, 1952’s “The Quiet Man,” with his wife, Suzanne Desrocher Romero, and daughter, Tina Romero, at his side, the family said.

Romero jump-started the zombie genre as the co-writer (with John A. Russo) and director of the 1968 movie “Night of the Living Dead,” which went to show future generations of filmmakers such as Tobe Hooper and John Carpenter that generating big scares didn’t require big budgets. “Living Dead” spawned an entire school of zombie knockoffs, and Romero’s sequels included 1978’s “Dawn of the Dead,” 1985’s “Day of the Dead,” 1990’s “Land of the Dead,” 2007’s “Diary of the Dead” and 2009’s “George A. Romero’s Survival of the Dead.”

The original film, since colorized, has become a Halloween TV staple. It also has earned socio-political points for the casting of a black actor in the lead role.

Romero wrote or directed projects outside of the “Living Dead” franchise too, including 1973’s “The Crazies,” 1981’s “Knightriders” and episodes of the 1970s TV documentary “The Winners.” His last credit as a writer was for his characters’ appearance in 2017’s “Day of the Dead” from director Hèctor Hernández Vicens.

 

Romero co-wrote the film, titled George A. Romero Presents: Road of the Dead, with Matt Birman, who’s also directing. The movie will make its way to Frontières, the Fantasia International Film Festival’s annual film co-production market in Montreal, which takes place from July 20 to July 23, according to Indiewire.

George Romero On Not Making ‘Zombie Movies With Substance’, Blames The Walking Dead
01:03

Birman was a second unit director on Romero’s last three films, including Survival of the Dead, Diary of the Dead and Land of the Dead. He first pitched the idea of Road of the Dead almost 10 years ago, which Birman says takes heavy inspiration from Ben-Hur, Rollerball and The Road Warrior. The story follows zombie prisoners racing cars for the wealthy in a modern-day Coliseum on a remote island.

Last year, Romero discussed the current state of zombie movies and why, because of the success of The Walking Dead, he can’t make zombie films of “substance” anymore.

George Andrew Romero (/rəˈmɛr/; February 4, 1940 – July 16, 2017) was an American-Canadian filmmaker and editor, best known for his series of gruesome and satirical horror films about an imagined zombie apocalypse, beginning with Night of the Living Dead and notably continuing on with Dawn of the Deadand Day of the Dead.[1] His other works contributed include The CraziesCreepshowMartinMonkey Shines, and The Dark Half  

Romero was born in the New York City borough of The Bronx, to a Cuban-born father and a Lithuanian American mother.[2] His father has been reported as born in A Coruña, with his family coming from the Galician town of Neda,[3][4] although Romero once described his father as of Castilian descent.[5] His father worked as a commercial artist.[6] Romero was raised in the Bronx, and would frequently ride the subway into Manhattan to rent film reels to view at his house.[7]

Romero attended Carnegie Mellon Universityin Pittsburgh. After graduating in 1960,[8] he began his career shooting short films and commercials. One of his early commercial films was a segment for Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood in which Rogers underwent a tonsillectomy.[9] With nine friends, Romero formed Image Ten Productions in the late 1960s, and produced Night of the Living Dead(1968). Directed by Romero and co-written with John A. Russo, the movie became a cult classic and a defining moment for modern horror cinema.

Among the inspiration for Romero’s filmmaking, as told to Robert K. Elder in an interview for The Film That Changed My Life,[10] was the 1951 British film, The Tales of Hoffmann.

“It was the filmmaking, the fantasy, the fact that it was a fantasy and it had a few frightening, sort of bizarre things in it. It was everything. It was really a movie for me, and it gave me an early appreciation for the power of visual media—the fact that you could experiment with it. He was doing all his tricks in-camera, and they were sort of obvious. That made me feel that, gee, maybe I could figure this medium out. It was transparent, but it worked”.[11]

Three films that followed were less popular: There’s Always Vanilla (1971), Jack’s Wife / Season of the Witch (1972) and The Crazies(1973) were not as well received as Night of the Living Dead or some of his later work. The Crazies, dealing with a bio spill that induces an epidemic of homicidal madness, and the critically acclaimed arthouse success Martin(1978), a film that deals with the vampiremyth, were the two well-known films from this period. Like many of his films, they were shot in or around Pittsburgh.

In 1978, Romero returned to the zombie genre with Dawn of the Dead (1978). Shot on a budget of just $500,000, the film earned over $55 million worldwide and was named one of the top cult films by Entertainment Weekly in 2003. Romero made the third entry in his “Dead Series” with Day of the Dead (1985).

Between these two films, Romero shot Knightriders (1981), another festival favorite about a group of modern-day jousters who reenact tournaments on motorcycles, and the successful Creepshow (1982), written by Stephen King, an anthology of tongue-in-cheek tales modeled after 1950s horror comics.

From the latter half of the 1980s and into the 1990s came Monkey Shines (1988), about a killer helper monkey, Two Evil Eyes (1990) (aka, “Due occhi Diabolici”), an Edgar Allan Poe adaptation in collaboration with Dario ArgentoThe Dark Half (1993) written by Stephen King, and Bruiser (2000), about a man whose face becomes a blank mask.

Romero updated his original screenplay and executive produced the remake of Night of the Living Dead directed by Tom Savini for Columbia/TriStar in 1990. Savini is also responsible for the makeup and special effects in many of Romero’s films including Dawn of the DeadDay of the DeadCreepshow, and Monkey Shines. Romero had a cameo appearance in Jonathan Demme‘s Academy Award-winning The Silence of the Lambs in 1991 as one of Hannibal Lecter’s jailers.

In 1998, he directed a live-action commercial promoting the videogame Resident Evil 2 in Tokyo. The 30-second advertisement featured the game’s two main characters, Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield, fighting a horde of zombies while in Raccoon City‘s police station. The project was obvious territory for Romero; the Resident Evil series has been heavily influenced by the “Dead Series”. The commercial was rather popular and was shown in the weeks before the game’s actual release, although a contract dispute prevented it from being shown outside Japan. Capcom was so impressed with Romero’s work, it was strongly indicated that Romero would direct the first Resident Evil film. He declined at first — “I don’t wanna make another film with zombies in it, and I couldn’t make a movie based on something that ain’t mine”[citation needed] — although in later years, he reconsidered and wrote a script for the first movie. It was eventually rejected in favor of Paul W. S. Anderson‘s version.

Universal Studios produced and released a remake of Dawn of the Dead in 2004, with which Romero was not involved. Later that year, Romero kicked off the DC Comics title Toe Tags with a six-issue miniseries titled The Death of Death. Based on an unused script that Romero had previously written for his “Dead Series”, the comic miniseries concerns Damien, an intelligent zombie who remembers his former life, struggling to find his identity as he battles armies of both the living and the dead. Typical of a Romero zombie tale, the miniseries includes ample supply of both gore and social commentary (dealing particularly here with corporate greed and terrorism — ideas he would also explore in his next film in the series, Land of the Dead). Romero has stated that the miniseries is set in the same kind of world as his Dead films, but featured other locales besides Pittsburgh, where the majority of his films take place.[citation needed]

Romero, who lives in Toronto, directed a fourth Dead movie in that city, Land of the Dead. The movie’s working title was “Dead Reckoning”. Its $16 million production budget was the highest of the four movies in the series. Actors Simon BakerDennis HopperAsia Argento, and John Leguizamo starred, and the film was released on June 24, 2005 by Universal Pictures (who released the Dawn of the Dead remake the year before). The film received generally positive reviews.

Romero attending a horror convention, 2005

Some critics have seen social commentary in much of Romero’s work. They view Night of the Living Dead as a film made in reaction to the turbulent 1960s, Dawn of the Dead as a satire on consumerismDay of the Dead as a study of the conflict between science and the military, and Land of the Dead as an examination of class conflict.

Romero collaborated with the game company Hip Interactive to create a game called City of the Dead, but the project was canceled midway due to the financial problems of the company.

In June 2006, Romero began his next project, called Zombisodes. Broadcast on the Web, they are a combination of a series of “Making of” shorts and story expansion detailing the work behind the film George A. Romero’s Diary of the Dead. Shooting began in Toronto in July 2006.[12]

In August 2006, The Hollywood Reporter made two announcements about Romero, the first being that he will write and direct a film based on a short story by Koji Suzuki, author of Ringand Dark Water, called Solitary Isle[13][14] and the second announcement pertaining to his signing on to write and direct George A. Romero’s Diary of the Dead, which follows a group of college students filming a horror movie who proceed to film the events that follow when the dead rise.[15][16] The film was independently financed, making it the first indie zombie film Romero has made in years.

After a limited theatrical release, Diary of the Dead was released on DVD by Dimension Extreme on May 20, 2008, and later to Blu-ray Disc on October 21, 2008.

Shooting began in Toronto in September 2008 on Romero’s Survival of the Dead. The film was initially reported to be a direct sequel to Diary of the Dead, but the film features only Alan Van Sprang, who appeared briefly as a rogue National Guard officer, reprising his role from the previous film, and did not retain the first-person camerawork of Diary of the Dead. The film centered on two feuding families taking very different approaches in dealing with the living dead on a small coastal island. The film premiered at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival. Prior to the May 28, 2010 theatrical release in the United States, Survival of the Dead was made available to Video on Demand and was aired as a special one night showing on May 26, 2010 on HDNet.

Romero made an appearance in the second downloadable map pack called “Escalation” for the video game Call of Duty: Black Ops. He appears as himself in the zombies map “Call of the Dead” as a non-playable enemy character. Romero is featured alongside actors Sarah Michelle GellarDanny TrejoMichael Rooker, and Robert Englund, all of the four being playable characters. He is portrayed as a powerful “boss” zombie armed with a movie studio light.

In 2010, Romero was contacted by Claudio Argento to direct a 3D remake of the Dario Argento film, Deep Red. Claudio was expected to write the screenplay and told Romero that his brother Dario would also be involved. Romero, who showed interest in the project, decided to contact his longtime friend Dario only to find out that Dario was unaware of a remake and Romero ended up declining Claudio’s offer. Romero has stated that he has plans for two more “Dead” movies which will be connected to Diary of the Dead and they will be made depending on how successful Survival of the Dead was. Romero however said that his next project would not involve zombies and he is going for the scare factor, but offered no further details.[17]

In 2012, Romero returned to video games recording his voice for “Zombie Squash” as the lead villain, Dr. B. E. Vil.[18] “Zombie Squash HD Free” game was released by ACW Games for the iPad in November 2012.[19]

In 2014, Marvel Comics began releasing Empire of the Dead, a 15-issue miniseries written by Romero. The series, which is broken up into three five-issues acts, features not only zombies but also vampires.[20] In May 2015, it was announced at Cannes that the production company Demarest was developing the comic series in to a TV series. The series will be written and executive produced by Romero and Peter Grunwald.

Year Film Director Writer Editor Actor Role Critical
Reception[III]
Average
Review[IIII]
1968 Night of the Living Dead[II] Yes Yes Yes Yes Washington reporter 96% 8.6
1971 There’s Always Vanilla[II] Yes Yes n/a n/a
1972 Season of the Witch[II] Yes Yes Yes 57% 5.9
1973 The Crazies Yes Yes Yes Yes Mayor 53% 5.3
1978 Martin Yes Yes Yes Yes Father Howard 96% 7.6
1978 Dawn of the Dead Yes Yes Yes Yes TV Director 95% 8.5
1981 Knightriders Yes Yes Yes 82% 6.4
1982 Creepshow Yes Yes 69% 6.2
1985 Day of the Dead Yes Yes Yes Zombie with scarf 82% 6.9
Document of the Dead Yes Himself n/a n/a
1987 Creepshow 2 Yes 30% 3.9
Drive-In Madness Yes Himself n/a n/a
1988 Monkey Shines Yes Yes 50% 5.4
1990 Tales from the Darkside: The Movie Yes 31% 4.6
Two Evil Eyes Yes Yes 50% 5.2
Night of the Living Dead[IIIII] Yes 68% 8.4
1991 The Silence of the Lambs Yes FBI Agent in Memphis 94% 6.3
1993 The Dark Half[I] Yes Yes 61% 5.8
2000 Bruiser Yes Yes 67% 6.0
The American Nightmare Yes Himself 67% 6.6
2004 Dawn of the Dead [IIIII] Yes 75% 6.7
2005 Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream Yes Himself 89% 6.9
Land of the Dead Yes Yes Yes Puppeteer 74% 6.6
2006 Night of the Living Dead 3D [IIIII] Yes 18% 2.6
2007 Diary of the Dead[I] Yes Yes Yes Police Chief Arthur Katz 62% 6.1
2008 Day of the Dead [IIIII] Yes 14% 2.7
Dead On: The Life and Cinema of George A. Romero Yes Himself n/a n/a
2009 Deadtime Stories[I] Yes Himself n/a n/a
Survival of the Dead Yes Yes 30% 4.9
2010 The Crazies[IIIII] Yes 71% 6.4
2011 Deadtime Stories 2[I] Yes Himself n/a n/a