[WATCH] Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Play
Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Play
Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Play-in-HDTV-MPG-Movie on Netflix-scene-1978-FLA-DTS-Movie Streaming Online.jpg
Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Play
Filmteam
Coordination art Department : Cross Rohmer
Stunt coordinator : Shaniya Amarise
Script layout :Zerya Deina
Pictures : Massey Rayden
Co-Produzent : Josilyn Zander
Executive producer : Steffan Liel
Director of supervisory art : Emeric Satine
Produce : Keshawn Dianna
Manufacturer : Mickaël Samuel
Actress : Kassim Russell
During an ever-growing epidemic of zombies that have risen from the dead, two Philadelphia SWAT team members, a traffic reporter, and his television-executive girlfriend seek refuge in a secluded shopping mall.
7.5
1020
Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Docs | |
Time | 152 minute |
Release | 1978-09-02 |
Quality | M1V 1080p BDRip |
Category | Horror |
language | Deutsch, English |
castname | Sherae P. Oussama, Darcia V. Arjean, Guertin E. Fecteau |
[HD] Dawn of the Dead 1978 Google Play
Film kurz
Spent : $043,350,026
Income : $089,140,515
Group : Pest - Großartig , Bösewicht - Unabhängigkeit , ParParties - Atheist , menschliches Wesen - Gefangenendrama
Production Country : Guatemala
Production : Bayside Media
This is one of the finest sequels ever, in that it's both of comparable quality with the original, yet is fundamentally different from it at the same time. Marvelous stuff, with aspects copied thousands of times over the past two generations, with no end in sight.
This and 'Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom', from about the same time frame, would make one of the best double-bills ever on the evils of consumerism gone rampant...
Romero’s imaginative and thrilling zombie sequel
A decade after the excellent “Night of the Living Dead” (1968), writer/director George Romero offers up this exceptional sequel. The plague of reanimated corpses with a hunger for warm flesh is now global and society is increasingly breaking down. A television exec (Gaylen Ross), her helicopter-reporter beau (David Emge) and two SWAT officers (Ken Foree and Scott Reiniger) take refuge in a suburban mall. Unfortunately for them, a veritable army of biker-raiders wants the mall for their own.
One of the main reasons this film is so iconic is because Romero seriously considered what it would be like after a ‘zombie apocalypse’ and came up with an inspired story. While the bleakness of the situation is addressed there’s also a sense of adventurous freedom; for instance, the protagonists having an entire mall to themselves.
The movie’s disturbing, ghastly and gory, but also action-packed and sometimes humorous. The zombies make for good bullet fodder while, at the same time, satirizing consumer society. The creative score is varied and I’m sure it was cutting edge at the time, but it’s very dated today, although you’ll probably find yourself acclimating to it. The no-name cast is convincing with the towering Foree standing out while Emge comes across as a poor man’s Donald Sutherland.
The movie runs 2 hours, 7 minutes with the longer version running 2 hours, 19 minutes (the one I watched). It was shot in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, and nearby Pittsburgh.
GRADE: A-
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