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Title:
George A. Romero’s Land Of The Dead: Unrated Director’s Cut: Widescreen
Region:
One
Genre:
Horror
Stars:
Simon Baker, Dennis Hopper, Asia Argento, Robert Joy, John Leguizamo, Eugene
Clark, Tom Savini, Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright
Writer:
George A. Romero
Director:
George A. Romero
Feature
length: 1 hour and 37 minutes
Extras:
Feature Length Audio Commentary With Director George A. Romero, “Undead Again:
The Making Of Land Of The Dead” Featurette, “A Day With The Living Dead”
Featurette, “The Remaining Bits – Deleted Scenes”, “When Shaun Met
George” Featurette, “Bringing The Dead To Life” Featurette, Scenes Of
Carnage Music Video, “Zombie Effects: From The Green Screen To Finished
Scene” Comparisons, “Bringing The Storyboards To Life” Comparisons,
“Screen Tests: Zombie Casting Calls”, Previews
Languages:
English DTS Digital 5.1 Theatrical Surround Sound and Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
Sound
Subtitles:
English Captions and French and Spanish Language Subtitles
Packaging:
Keep Case
Chapter
Stops: 21
Sound:
DTS Digital 5.1 Theatrical Surround Sound and Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Year
of Theatrical Release: 2005/DVD Release: 2005
Theatrical
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Home
Video Distributor: Universal Studios Home Entertainment
MPAA
Rating: Not Rated
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
After
twenty years, George A. Romero finally released the fourth film in his “Living
Dead” series that began with “Night Of The Living Dead” in 1968. The exact
amount of time after the third film in the series, “Day Of The Dead,” is not
made clear since each film in the series focuses on a different group of
characters coping in a world where the dead are coming back to life and feeding
on the flesh of the living. If you have seen any of the previous films, you
don’t need to know the rules that have developed as a sort of mythology for
the series, but for those who have yet to see a George Romero zombie picture the
basic facts are that a few years ago a plague of zombies began to appear. It is
now a fact in this world that after you die you will rise again unless your
brain is destroyed, which is the only way to kill a zombie. The reason for why
this has occurred has become obscured between rumors as diverse as some strange
radiation that showered down upon the Earth from a space probe returning from
Venus, a virus, or a curse upon humanity. The early attempts to contain the
epidemic failed because anyone who survives a bite from a zombie will become one
in a short span of time, which could be a matter of hours or days. In addition
if a zombie victim’s brain remain intact enough following an attack, the
victim will reanimate too. Eventually panic and a failed attempt at martial law
caused a complete breakdown in society and the zombies overran the Earth in a
tidal wave of anarchy. Attempts at trying to discover a cure or way of
controlling the zombies also proved futile. The surviving humans spread out
wherever they could find some form of sanctuary from the undead. Wealthy
profiteers who set up fortified cities soon recruited groups of raiders to go
into the undead wastelands to secure supplies and luxuries from the old world
and soon a new class system emerged - the rich, the poor, and the undead.
Somehow these cities have been able to maintain some form of contact and
commerce between the citizens of each settlement so money is still used in
exchange for goods.
In
one of these cities, which happens to look a lot like George Romero’s hometown
of Pittsburgh, Kaufman (Dennis Hopper) rules from the top of a towering building
known as Fiddler’s Green. There the blue bloods live in a façade that mirrors
the world of the past and allows the inhabitants to ignore the poverty and
threats that exist outside of Fiddler’s Green. Kaufman has fortified the city
with a standing army that includes the Dead Reckoning, an armored all
terrain vehicle armed with missiles, guns, and enough sophisticated technology
to keep both the living and the living dead at bay in an attack. Within the
city, but outside on the streets that surround Fiddler’s Green, the poor and
homeless are given all sorts of vices to keep them occupied and under control.
It would seem that under these circumstances, Kaufman could keep this racket
going on indefinitely for as long as he keeps the poor untainted humans occupied
and keeps the undead out of the city, he practically rules unopposed. However
within the span of 48 hours everything he has will soon be torn apart. The
zombies are becoming sentient and learning to use the tools they once
facilitated in their previous lives. One zombie with a gas station attendant’s
uniform that says “Big Daddy” (Eugene Clark) has not only become self aware,
but he has developed a compassion of sorts for his fellow undead and a deep
resentment for the raiders that enter his suburban town a loot it, blowing away
zombies in their path. Big Daddy leads by example and his drive takes him and an
army of the undead all the way to Fiddler’s Green, which he sees as the source
of the raids. Within the city, dissidents calling attention to Kaufman’s
underhanded regime are rounded up, questioned, and often killed by the same
people Kaufman sends out into the wastelands to keep his empire going. When
Kaufman double-crosses one of the mercenaries (John Leguizamo), he places the
city in double jeopardy because as the zombies attack the military compound that
exists across the river from the city, the Dead Reckoning is stolen and
Kaufman is given an ultimatum. Either pay out five million dollars or watch his
city crumble under the weaponry of the Dead Reckoning. Refusing to
negotiate, Kaufman cuts a deal with Riley (Simon Baker), the man who built the Dead
Reckoning, and sends him out to secure and bring the fortress on wheels
back. Riley is well aware of Kaufman’s corruption as well as the evolving
undead threat that exists outside of the city, but all he wants to do is travel
as far north as he can where he and a few others might be able to live a life
free of fences, other people, and the living dead.
Arguably
his most political installment in the quartet of “Living Dead” films he has
directed, George A. Romero’s “Land Of The Dead” is in some ways less epic
in scope than the second film in the series “Dawn Of The Dead,” despite the
higher budget and studio backing. The film is thankfully less bleak than “Day
Of The Dead” and actually offers a glimmer of hope in the open-ended finale
Romero consciously concocted should this film be his final installment in the
series. Greg Nicotero’s makeup effects are outstanding and the film contains
an element of pathos the three previous films did not have. Fans of the series
will always have a favorite, but with “Land Of The Dead” George A. Romero
has proven once again why no one can equal what he does. Simply put, Romero is
both a Grand Master in the horror film genre as well as a dynamic and artistic
filmmaker who’s still at the top of his game.
Universal
Studios Home Entertainment is releasing “George A. Romero’s Land Of The
Dead” in both a full screen (1.33:1) theatrical cut DVD and both a full screen
and anamorphic widescreen (2.35:1) Unrated Director’s Cut DVDs. This is the
first of his living dead films to be shot and presented using cinemascope and
Romero fills the visual compositions quite nicely so fans can watch the film
multiple times and catch new details. The Unrated Director’s Cut features more
gore that Romero did not even attempt to bring to the MPAA for the film to
receive an R rating. The new gore scenes are quite extreme and include such
gross out moments as a man having his eye bitten out of it’s socket along with
part of his face and another hapless victim literally having his face torn right
off to reveal his fleshy skull. There are also more dialogue scenes that enhance
the characters a bit and in particular a scene where John Leguizamo’s
character must contend with the suicide of one of the tenant’s of Fiddler’s
Green.
Personally
I am glad to see the restored scenes, but I think the change in structure that
occurs as a result slows down the film’s momentum and I wish both the
theatrical and the Unrated Director’s Cut were made available via seamless
branching on one DVD. I figure the soundtrack options could have been kept on
one disc while a second disc could have held the bonus video features. As it is
the picture quality is not as sharp as I expected because the extra value
features as well as a DTS Theatrical Surround Soundtrack have been compressed
onto one DVD. The transfer is not bad, but there is definitely a loss in the
quality of the resolution that is particularly noticeable if you watch the film
on a widescreen TV where the image is not compressed to fit a standard 4 by 3
television frame. The English DTS Digital 5.1 Theatrical Surround Soundtrack is
quite dynamic and has a deeper bass level that the well mixed English Dolby
Digital 5.1 Surround Soundtrack. English Captions for the hearing impaired and
French and Spanish Language Subtitles are encoded onto the dual layered disc as
options too.
There
is also a feature length audio commentary track with Writer and Director George
Romero, Producer Peter Grunwald, and Editor Michael Daughtery. (Please
note that the back of the packaging lists the Editor’s last name as being
spelled Doherty, but the name on the DVD bonus features menu lists it as being
spelled Daughtery. So I went with the spelling on the DVD menu and apologize in
advance if I chose the wrong spelling.) Some people might think I’m
crazy for stating this, but as articulate as Mr. Romero is when discussing his
films, he seems to have developed a wholesome and jolly quality about him that
somehow reminds me of Marvel Comics’ Stan Lee. I may not be too far off the
mark either since there is a certain comic book quality to “Dawn Of The
Dead” and both “Dawn Of The Dead” and “Land Of The Dead” were
eventually adapted into comic books too. Overall the commentary is extremely
informative and caters to both those interested in how a film like this is made
and to the diehard fans that want to know the gruesome details regarding this
dark fantasy world Mr. Romero has created. I was surprised to learn that people
are still reanimating after death regardless if they were bit by a zombie or not
because prior to screening this disc, I only saw the theatrical cut when it was
playing on the big screen and for me anyway that point was not made clear until
seeing the Director’s Cut. Of course this then leaves open the question left
from “Day Of The Dead” regarding why didn’t we see the character of Doctor
Logan, who was played by the late Richard Liberty, rise from the dead since he
was clearly not shot in the head. After all, if the brain is intact then the
dead body will rise up and act.
The
other bonus features include a series of featurettes like “Undead Again”
(12:56), which is a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the film. John
Leguizamo adds some humor to his tour of the set in “A Day With The Living
Dead” (7:34) and Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright add some distinct British humor
to their featurette “When Shaun Met George” (13:00) and in fact they’re
zombie cameo characters can be seen on the DVD cover art for “Land Of The
Dead” with Pegg standing just behind Big Daddy to the left and Wright standing
behind another feature zombie to the right of the cover art. There’s also a
reel of deleted scenes under the heading “The Remaining Bits” (9:31), which
are presented in a letterboxed (2.35:1) aspect ratio.
Exclusive
bonus features included only on the Unrated Director’s Cut DVD are a makeup
effects featurette with Greg Nicotero entitled “Bringing The Dead To Life”
(9:31), a montage of some of the gorier moments sets to classical music in
“Scenes Of Carnage” (1:44), an exploration of the CGI effects used to
enhance the film in “Zombie Effects: From Green Screen To Finished Scene”
(3:19), storyboard to finished scene comparisons (7:56), and a CGI spoof with
zombies dancing to what looks like the choreographed moves from Michael
Jackson’s “Thriller” music video (1:05). The main menu is animated with
motion transitions featuring scenes from the film while the subsequent DVD menus
are all standard interactive still frames that are easy to navigate. A reel of
previews (3:34) appears before the opening DVD menu and includes trailers for
the “Land Of The Dead: Road To Fiddler’s Green” game, “American Pie
Presents Band Camp” and “Unleashed.”
“George
A. Romero’s Land Of The Dead: Unrated Director’s Cut: Widescreen” will
debut on DVD-Video on Tuesday, October 18, 2005 at retailers on and offline
courtesy of Universal Studios Home Entertainment.
©
Copyright 2005 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.
Read
My Interview With George A. Romero By Clicking Here!

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