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Dawn of the Dead -- U.S. Theatrical Cut

Dawn of the Dead -- U.S. Theatrical Cut

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Classic horror
Review: Dawn of the Dead is one of the best zombie flicks out there. Anyone who doesn't enjoy this movie is probably more of a fan of the "new horror" films like scream (blech). To best enjoy this film watch the three George A. Ramero movies in order (Night Of The Living Dead, Dawn Of The Dead, and then Day Of The Dead). You won't be disappointed

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An insult to horror/B rated movies.
Review: This movie is horrible. When I say horrible, I mean, I'd rather be sexually molesting Celine Dion horrible. Well, perhaps not that bad, but still. I have never turned off a movie halfway through before but this one made me do it. The acting is horrible, the plotline is basic if even existant, and the special effects are... well, lets just say it's 1978. I love B films. Cheesy horror cult films are totally sweet. However, this one is just bad. It was a waste of 2 hours. The basic "plot" is that zombies have taken over the world apparently. (of course they give no background to the story) These four people keep running around in a mall for some reason. The black dude paints the walls. I'm so pissed I saw this movie. I'm gunna go gouge my eyes out now.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I can't sit Idly by...
Review: I have been reading these reviews, and cannot help but jump in and correct some of the innaccurate information. First of all, details of the Box set for later in the year are not finallized. No one knows what will be included in the set. Secondly, this is the BETTER version of DOTD. Forget the extra time in the other one. Its not 20 minutes worth, either, closer to 12. THIS is the Director's favorite cut. It is tighter, scarier, and feels finished. The other version is his first, rushed cut, to get into the Cannes film festival. It is MISSING music, tight editing, and overall feels sloppy. It does feature extended scenes and additional gore, so yes, its worth having. But this version is the better of the 2.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Remakes
Review: Why must Hollywood feel the need to remake classic horror movies? The remakes of the ones from the '50s seem to come out OK (most likely because of the updated special effects), but I don't know if I'll even be able to watch the remake of this film. I hate the fact that people will go into the theater to see the remake without watching this one first or even knowing that what they are seeing is a remake. It just bugs me. It's also sad that big studios can't come up with new and original plots and have to go and maul classics such as Dawn of the Dead and TCM. But anyway, this movie is great and i can't wait to get it on dvd.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Patience is a virtue Dead fans
Review: 3 stars for this DVD's features, 5 stars for the movie itself.I am being blunt and to the point to the fans. This DVD sounds to me, like a half-fast rushed job, to get something on the shelves before the popularity of the new Dawn movie takes off, which is due to be released soon. Don't allow yourselves to be sucked in by simply a remastered version (I know it's hard).

If you're a real fan like me, you will wait for the directors cut later on this year, with all the bells and whistles that you've been dreaming of. I've seen both versions and the directors cut is the only way the movie should be viewed. The theatrical version is rushed. You may think an extra 20 minutes or so is no big deal, but try to think how many little scenes you can cut out of a movie, with 20 minutes.

Trust me, the bells and whistles of the 2 DVD disc set are not to be missed. I have Dawn on my old Laserdisc (It was a total of 4 laserdiscs in a big box and the only way I will watch this classic) and it has most these bells and whistles that i'm speaking of. It has the full original script, with the original "Suicide Ending" that was rewritten. It also has things like the commercials, the board game, the floor plans of the mall and interviews to name a few. I'm telling you, you will kick yourself for not waiting.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Schlock as High Art
Review: Zombie movies. Lots of "serious" types look down on them. That's a shame, because some of them are really first-rate films. Dawn of the Dead, the middle film of George Romero's "dead" trilogy, is a case in point. You want zombies, we got your zombies RIGHT HERE! You want blood? Guts? Flesh eating? Oh boy, does Dawn of the Dead ever deliver!

And then it does something really unique - it also delivers drama, engaging characters with realistic delimmas, a smartly crafted story, and a heavy dose of dead-on social satire. And did I mention that it's just flat-out scary as hell, too?

There is one scene in particular, toward the beginning, that still haunts me - twenty some-odd years after I first saw it. The National Guard has been called in to clear a tenament building. In the basement, they find a cage where the dead have been locked away. The simple, unsettling music of Goblin rises on the soundtrack, underscored by a heartbeat-like bass drum. There are the zombies, many in death shrouds, feasting on body parts. Guardsman Peter Washington (Ken Foree) steps into the nightmare with a pistol to dispatch the zombies with bullets to their heads. The whole thing takes on a surreal, hellish texture, like a Bosch painting. Foree's performance is striking - he is truly IN THE MOMENT, as they say, without a hint of the winking self-awareness we see in other genre flicks. If the dead really started coming back to feed on the living, this is exactly what it be like. This is the toll it would exact on people trying to grapple with the situation.

Yet, in a way, Dawn of the Dead IS self-aware. It knows when to step back, too, and admit that it's playing with you. Another scene, of this sort, occurs when we see a group of rednecks hunting the shambling corpses as though they were deer. They sip coffee from thermoses, pass sandwiches around, and banter about their accuracy with their rifles. It's a very funny bit, in part because it's so deadpan.

Those are just two favorite examples. There is much, much more to this film, and almost all of it works beautifully. Even the sometimes obviously low budget and gleeful use of library stock music doesn't hurt. Romero turns these limitations to his advantage, by making them serve as searing comments on mass media, consumerism, and pop culture.

Performances by David Emge, Scott Reiniger, and Gaylen Ross are worthy of mention, too. They play real people in an extraordinary situation, rather than two-dimensional horror-movie characters.

Dawn of the Dead schlock as high art - complex, funny, scary, and engaging. And thank goodness it's coming back to DVD, because it's one worth watching over and over again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of The Few Movies To Give Me Nightmares
Review: This movie truly terrified me the first time I saw it. Something about the whole concept of the dead returning to life to hunt the living is very frightening. Yes, the movie may be corny considering how small of a budget it had and since it's 25 years old, but the point gets across. It's based around a sort of end of the world phenomenon involving thousands of the dead returning to life and walking the earth. As the world plunges into chaos, four survivors barricade themselves into a shopping mall surrounded by hundreds of the living dead. At first all is good, but things begin to grow wrong which results in a very scary and absolutely grusome finale.

I can't say that I recommend watching this alone. And if u were scared to death by this one, I also recommend "Day of the Dead" which together with this, will ensure that you never sleep again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Dawn
Review: Though this may be the single disc with little or no special features it's already on my pre-order list. This movie rocks! George A. Romero sure did step up to claim the next best sequel in horror movie history with Dawn of the Dead.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: IT'S ABOUT TIME!!!!
Review: It's about time they re-released this movie on DVD again!
I was so mad, that ive never been able to find this movie anywhere....so thank you DIVIMAX FILMS for releasing this film on DVD!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the BEST horror films ever made
Review: This is absolutely awsome!. I'm soooo glad the waiting is finally over. At last, George Romero's most influentiual and wildly popular horror film ever made is back on DVD, loaded with lots of extra footage and mastered with DiViMax. I just want to say, this is a must for every horror fan to see, especially if you are a zombie movie lover. I just hope the coming up remake is as good as this one and packed with an onslaught of gut-wrenching-flesh-eaters and exploding heads scenes; I guess we will find out at the movies next month. In the mean time, if you are a horror movie lover, don't hesitate to buy this DVD, JUST DO IT!.


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