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- In the final analysis, Land of the Dead comes across as generic. Despite being steeped in darkness, it lacks the taut pacing and nerve-jangling suspense of 28 Days Later, and doesn't have the tongue-in-cheek approach evident in Shaun of the Dead. It's got great makeup, though.
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Jun 23, 2005 · In the future world of “George A. Romero’s Land of the Dead,” both zombies and their victims have started to evolve. The zombies don’t simply shuffle around mindlessly, eating people. And the healthy humans don’t simply shoot them.
In a world where zombies form the majority of the population, the remaining humans build a feudal society away from the undead. Ruthless Paul Kaufman (Dennis Hopper) rules and protects this ...
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- George A. Romero
- R
- Simon Baker
George A. Romero's Land of the Dead is a decent follow up to his classic "Dead" trilogy, delivering compelling characters, a thrilling narrative, and plenty of zombie action/gore.
A notch down from the high watermarks of the preceding trilogy, but it still covers all bases of the Living Dead saga: inventive suspense, spiky characters, outrageous horror and wicked satire.
Land of the Dead (also known as George A. Romero's Land of the Dead) is a 2005 post-apocalyptic horror film written and directed by George A. Romero; the fourth of Romero's six Living Dead movies, it is preceded by Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead, and succeeded by Diary of the Dead and Survival of the Dead. [4]
Sep 20, 2005 · Romero’s fourth ‘Dead’ movie comes even closer than its predecessors to offering a plea for zombie rights – a plea whose satirical application stretches from America’s underclass to the ...
Jun 24, 2005 · Land of the Dead is Romero's long-awaited masterpiece, a slyly suspenseful and droll thrill-ride that expounds on both the highbrow and the chewed-off-brow concepts of his previous trilogy, then flippantly dismisses the cheap scare tactics of the control-pad generation's gimmicky genre knockoffs.