|
|
|
|
Home > George A. Romero's Land of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut)
|
|
George A. Romero's Land of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut)
|
|
By Show more by Universal Home Entertainment
|
|
List Price: $12.98
|
|
Our Price: $7.59 Eligible for FREE SHIPPING on orders over $25.00. Details
|
|
You Save: $5.39 (42%)
|
|
|
Availability:
|
Usually ships in 24 hours
|
|
Publisher:
|
Universal Home Entertainment
|
|
Published:
|
December 31, 1969 |
|
Binding:
|
DVD
|
|
|
|
|
From our affiliated sellers:
|
|
|
| |
| Product Description: |
|
| |
The living dead have overtaken the world and the few remaining human survivors have barricaded themselves in a city hoping to survive the zombie onslaught and unrest within their own ranks. Fourth installment in Romero's Night of the living dead" series. Genre: Science Fiction Rating: NR Release Date: 17-JAN-2006 Media Type: DVD"""
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
Bolstered by the success of 28 Days Later, Shaun of the Dead, the Resident Evil movies and the hit remake of his own Dawn of the Dead, George A. Romero returns to the horror subgenre he invented with Land of the Dead. The fourth installment in Romero's zombie cycle (and the first since 1985's Day of the Dead) presents a logical progression of events since 1968's horror classic Night of the Living Dead: Zombies (also known as "stenches" for their rotting odor) are the dominant population, and they've begun to show signs of undead intelligence and gathering power. The wealthiest survivors live comfortably in a luxury high-rise within a barricaded safe zone, ignoring the horrors of the outside world while armed scavengers stage raids in the zombie-zone to gather much-needed food and supplies. Simon Baker and John Leguizamo play mercenaries-for-hire; Dennis Hopper is their nefarious boss; and horror favorite Asia Argento (daughter of Suspiria director Dario Argento) plays a former hooker recruited into Baker's scavenger squad. While none of this seems particularly fresh or inspired, Land of the Dead benefits from hints of the social satire that made Romero's earlier zombie films so memorable. Not so much funny as gruesomely peculiar, Romero's plot isn't as inventive as it could've been, but as a big-scale B-movie, Land of the Dead delivers a handful of shocks and horror-celebrity cameos (including gore-masters Tom Savini and Greg Nicotero) that should keep horror buffs happy until the next zombie opus comes along. --Jeff Shannon
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|