Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Night of the Living Dead: Film Analysis for MCOMM 224


Current mood: lazy



Dialogue from George A. Romero's 1968 horror classic, Night of the Living Dead:
"We'd all be better off us three working together."
"We may not enjoy living together, but dying together won't solve anything."
"Beat em', burn em', they go up pretty easy."


These lines could all be associated with the Civil Rights movement, the last being a description of a lynching. From interviews with the co-writer/director, he considered the film to be a message about racism (the film's first sequel was about consumerism and its third sequel about corporate greed). His message was delivered to an unprepared audience with a black protagonist by the means of zombies. With the support of critics and horror film enthusiasts, this maybe one of the longest lasting message about the subject.
Check out the rest of review at "Ninety For Chill: A More Acceptable Runtime"

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