Diary of the Dead

March 7th, 2008







Advertisments





Diary of the Dead

No valid json found

George A. Romero in Diary of the DeadDiary of the DeadDiary of the DeadDiary of the DeadDiary of the DeadDiary of the Dead

Plot
A group of young film students run into real-life zombies while filming a horror movie of their own.

Release Year: 2007

Rating: 5.9/10 (26,728 voted)

Critic's Score: 66/100

Director: George A. Romero

Stars: Michelle Morgan, Joshua Close, Shawn Roberts

Storyline
While filming a horror movie of mummy in a forest, the students and their professor of the University of Pittsburgh hear on the TV the news that the dead are awaking and walking. Ridley and Francine decide to leave the group, while Jason heads to the dormitory of his girlfriend Debra Monahan. She does not succeed in contacting her family and they travel in Mary's van to the house of Debra's parents in Scranton, Pennsylvania. While driving her van, Mary sees a car accident and runs over a highway patrolman and three other zombies trying to escape from them. Later the religious Mary is depressed, questioning whether the victims where really dead, and tries to commit suicide, shooting herself with a pistol. Her friends take her to a hospital where they realize that the dead are indeed awaking and walking and they need to fight to survive while traveling to Debra's parents house.

Cast:
Michelle Morgan - Debra Moynihan
Joshua Close - Jason Creed (as Josh Close)
Shawn Roberts - Tony Ravello
Amy Lalonde - Tracy Thurman
Joe Dinicol - Eliot Stone
Scott Wentworth - Andrew Maxwell
Philip Riccio - Ridley Wilmott
Chris Violette - Gordo Thorsen
Tatiana Maslany - Mary Dexter
Todd Schroeder - Brody (as Todd William Schroeder)
Daniel Kash - Police Officer
Laura de Carteret - Bree (as Laura DeCarteret)
Martin Roach - Stranger
Megan Park - Francine Shane
George Buza - Tattooed Biker

Taglines: A new vision of terror from the legendary filmmaker



Details

Official Website: Bac Films [France] | Official site |

Release Date: 7 March 2008

Filming Locations: Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Box Office Details

Budget: $2,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $275,061 (USA) (17 February 2008) (42 Screens)

Gross: $952,620 (USA) (27 April 2008)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Cameo: [Quentin Tarantino] Director of films such as Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction cameos in a voiceover role as a newsreader.

Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: At approximately 17:30 into the movie, an oncoming car beeps and passes by the van where everyone is introducing themselves. As we look at the passing car, its headlights reveal outside that the trees aren't moving and the van we're in is actually stationary.

Quotes:
[first lines]
Police Officer: 628 Tremont. 6-2-8. Three dead. No, just the usual. Fuck. Usual. It's no big deal these days, right?



User Review

oh dear

Rating: 6/10

I have always admired the films of Romero and there can be no doubt that he is the godfather of zombie films. Alas, i think he should have finished his zombie career with day of the dead. Land of the dead certainly wasn't a bad film and this is far from the worst i've ever seen but the step down is none the less noticeable. The modern cinematic world owes a lot to Romero but it's clear that the modern cinematic world has moved on from him.

Lets start with the main problems(and ignore the million little ones):-

1. An idiot who keeps filming even when he or his friends are in danger (at no point does the brilliant idea of putting the camera down occur to him)

2. A narrator that appears to have edited the film so that it looks polished and yet who chooses to leave in the moments when the camera goes off or turns black

3. A narrator (and editor) who thinks incidental music should be added for tension (imagine those who filmed 9/11 doing the same and you will arrive at the same tasteless nature of this)

4. A narrator (and editor) who wishes for us to witness her rotting corpse family attack her (journalists may pretend to put journalistic integrity before emotional involvement but this is perverse)

5. An allegory for the war in Iraq (we aren't being given the full information etc) that needs to be endlessly repeated.

6. The notion that they needed to film everything to show the world the truth (like walking zombies wouldn't do it for most people)

7. Romero getting the opportunity to remind everyone that he thinks zombies should be slow (and reminding us again and again)

This isn't an absolutely awful film by any stretch but in relation to the history and reputation of Romero, it is alas.....somewhat of an embarrassment





Comments:

Comments are closed.


Advertisments










Searching...