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The Inspector General (1949 Color Musical Comedy film)
Glorifying the American Girl (1929 Pre-Code Musical Comedy film)
The Old Barn (1929 Talkie Film)
The Dance of Life (1929 American Pre-Code Musical film)
Big News (1929 American Pre-Code film)
The Bees' Buzz (1929 "Talkie" Comedy film)
Hook, Line and Sinker (1930 Pre-Code Slapstick Comedy film)
Abraham Lincoln (1930) Pre-Code Biographical film
Hot Curves (1930 Pre-Code) Comedy Drama film
Half Shot at Sunrise (1930 Pre-Code Comedy film)
The Bat Whispers (1930 American Pre-Code mystery film) (widescreen)
The Royal Bed (1931 Pre-Code Satirical Comedy film)
The Black Camel (1931) Charlie Chan Mystery Film
Mr. Robinson Crusoe (1932) Comedic, Adventure Movie
The Thirteenth Guest (1932 Pre-Code Mystery Comedy Thriller film)
Bird of Paradise (1932 Pre-Code Romantic Adv. Drama film)
The Kennel Muser Case (1933 American Pre-Code mystery film)
Deluge (1933 American Apocalyptic Sci-Fi film)
The Lost City (1935 Independent Sci-Fi movie Serial)
My Man Godfrey (1936 Colorized Screwball Comedy film)
Nothing Sacred (1937 Technicolor screwball comedy film)
Gulliver's Travels (1939 Animated Musical Fantasy film)
Made for Each Other (1939 American Romantic Comedy film)
Holt of the Secret Service (1941 Columbia film Serial)
Zorro's Black Whip (1944 Republic Pictures Movie Serial)
Captain America (1944 Republic 15-chapter Movie Serial)
Till The Clouds Roll By (1946 American Technicolor Musical film)
The Stranger (1946 American Thriller film noir)
The Chase (1946 American film noir)
Angel and the Badman (1947 American Western film)
My Favorite Brunette (1947 American romantic comedy film)
The Amazing Mr. X (1948 American Horror Thriller film noir)
My Dear Secretary (1948 American Comedy film)
Africa Screams (1949 Abbott & Costello Comedy film)
Quicksand (1950 American film noir)
Cyrano de Bergerac (1950 American Adventure Comedy film)
D.O.A. (1950 American film noir)
The Jackie Robinson Story (1950 biographical film)
Father's Little Dividend (1951 American Comedy film)
Royal Wedding (1951 American Musical Comedy film)
Kansas City Confidential (1952 American film noir)
Indestructible Man (1956 Crime Horror Sci-Fi film)
The Screaming Skull (1958 American horror film)
Teenagers from Outer Space (1959 Independent Sci-Fi Cult film)
The Bat (1959 American Crime-Mystery Thriller film)
House on Haunted Hill (1959 Crime, Horror, Mystery film)
The Little Shop of Horrors (1960 American Horror Comedy film)
Carnival of Souls (1962 Independent Horror film)
McLintock! (1963 American Western Comedy film)
Night of the Living Dead (1968 American Independent Horror film)
Virus (1980 Japanese Sci-Fi Film)
Night of the Living Dead (1968 American Independent Horror film)
Night of the Living Dead is a 1968 American independent horror film directed, photographed, and edited by George A. Romero, with a screenplay by John Russo and Romero, and starring Duane Jones and Judith O'Dea. The story follows seven people who are trapped in a rural farmhouse in western Pennsylvania, which is under assault by an enlarging group of flesh-eating, undead ghouls.
Having gained experience through directing television commercials and industrial films for their Pittsburgh-based production company The Latent Image, Romero and his friends Russo and Russell Streiner decided to fulfill their ambitions to make a feature film.
Electing to make a horror film that would capitalize on contemporary commercial interest in the genre, they formed a partnership with Karl Hardman and Marilyn Eastman of Hardman Associates called Image Ten. After evolving through multiple drafts, Russo and Romero's final script primarily drew influence from Richard Matheson's 1954 novel I Am Legend.
Principal photography took place between July 1967 and January 1968, mainly on location in Evans City; aside from the Image Ten team themselves, the cast and crew consisted of their friends and relatives, local stage and amateur actors, and residents from the area. Although the film was his directorial debut, Romero utilized many of the guerrilla filmmaking techniques he had homed in his commercial and industrial work to complete the film on a budget of approximately US$100,000.
Following its theatrical premiere in Pittsburgh on October 1, 1968, Night of the Living Dead eventually grossed US$12 million domestically and US$18 million internationally, earning more than 250 times its budget and making it one of the most profitable film productions ever made at the time.
Plot
Siblings Barbra and Johnny drive to a cemetery in rural Pennsylvania to visit their father's grave. Their car radio goes off the air due to technical difficulties. As they are leaving, a pale man wearing a tattered suit kills Johnny and attacks Barbra. She flees and takes shelter in a farmhouse, but finds the woman who lived there dead and half-eaten.
She sees a multiplying number of strange ghouls, led by the man from the cemetery, approaching the house. A man named Ben arrives, who secures the farmhouse by boarding the windows and doors and drives away the ghouls with a lever-action rifle.
Cast
Duane Jones as Ben
Judith O'Dea as Barbra
Karl Hardman as Harry Cooper
Marilyn Eastman as Helen Cooper
Keith Wayne as Tom. "Keith Wayne"
Judith Ridley as Judy. Ridley
Principal photography
Tombstone that the character Barbra (Judith O'Dea) clutches in the opening scene of the movie (Photo taken in 2017). According to the inscription on the tombstone itself, the tombstone marks the burial place of a man called "Nicholas Kramer" who lived from February 18, 1842, to March 17, 1917.
The small budget dictated much of the production process. According to Hardman, "We knew that we could not raise enough money to shoot a film on a par with the classic horror films with which we had all grown up. The best that we could do was to place our cast in a remote spot and then bring the horror to be visited on them in that spot". Scenes were filmed near Evans City, Pennsylvania, 30 miles (48 km) north of Pittsburgh in rural Butler County; the opening sequence was shot at the Evans City Cemetery on Franklin Road, south of the borough. The cemetery chapel was under warrant for demolition; however, Gary R. Steiner led a successful effort to raise $50,000 to restore the building, and the chapel is currently undergoing renovations.
The outdoor, indoor (downstairs), and basement scenes were filmed at a location northeast of Evans City, near a park. The basement door (external view) shown in the film was cut into a wall by the production team and led nowhere. As this house was scheduled for demolition, damage during filming was permitted. The site is now a turf farm.
Props and special effects were fairly simple and limited by the budget. The blood, for example, was Bosco Chocolate Syrup drizzled over cast members' bodies.[42] Consumed flesh consisted of roasted ham and entrails donated by one of the actors, who also owned a chain of butcher shops.
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