George A. Romero, 'Night of the Living Dead' creator, dies at 77
It was the night of April 4, 1968, and George A. Romero was driving to New York City from Pittsburgh on a mission: In the days to come he was to meet with film studios in hopes that one might buy the horror film he was lugging in his trunk, âNight of the Flesh Eaters.â
None of the studios was interested, but Romero still managed to get his $114,000 film in front of audiences that year. And though critics panned the picture, retitled âNight of the Living Dead,â moviegoers were mesmerized â" packing theaters, hitting the drive-ins in droves and making Romero the father of the modern movie zombie. Romeroâs âLiving Deadâ franchise went on to create a subgenre of horror movie whose influence across the decades has endured, seen in movies like âThe Purgeâ and TV shows like âThe Walking Dead.â
Romero died Sunday in his sleep after a âbrief but aggressive battle with lung cancer,â according to a family statement to The Times provided by his longtime producing partner, Peter Grunwald. He was 77.
Romero died while listening to the score of one his favorite films, 1952âs âThe Quiet Man,â with his wife, Suzanne Desrocher Romero, and daughter, Tina Romero, at his side, the family said.
Romero will be remembered best for co-writing (with John A. Russo) and directing âNight of the Living Dead,â which showed later generations of filmmakers such as Tobe Hooper and John Carpenter that generating big scares didnât require big budgets. âLiving Deadâ spawned an entire school of zombie knockoffs, and Romeroâs own sequels were 1978âs âDawn of the Dead,â 1985âs âDay of the Dead,â 2005âs âLand of the Dead,â 2007âs âDiary of the Deadâ and 2009âs âGeorge A. Romeroâs Survival of the Dead.â
To get that first film made, however, Romero turned to a resourceful team of Pittsburgh TV-commercial producers. For distribution, the rookie filmmaker turned to the Walter Reade Organization, the parent of Continental Releasing, which specialized in artsy movies like John Cassavetesâ âFaces.â The director and his team got 14 prints made, handled their own promotion and opened the picture at 14 local theaters. They financed a world premiere on Halloween night.
Most critics trashed the movie, with Daily Variety citing âunrelieved sadism ⦠which casts serious aspersions on the integrity of its makers.â But audiences loved it, and drive-in operators took out newspaper ads to apologize for turning away so many customers.
Romero once told The Times that he was surprised at criticsâ reactions; he said Roger Ebert's review all but called âLiving Deadâ a movie spawned by the devil.
Over time, however, fans have pointed out that, setting aside the graphic violence that made Romeroâs work so distinct, there were sociopolitical messages that made his movies noteworthy, starting with the casting of that first âLiving Deadâ picture.
âI think the reason it got noticed was the fact that we used an African American actor in a role that didnât need to be played by an African American actor, and then he gets gunned down by this posse,â Romero said, noting that the role was originally written for a white man. On the night of that drive to New York City, he said, âwe heard on the radio that [the Rev. Martin Luther] King had been assassinated. So now all of a sudden the power of the film was ratcheted up that much more.â
âLiving Deadâ went on to gross upward of $50 million.
âHe took the image of the zombie, which up to that point was rooted in the Caribbean and part of a black Caribbean culture, and turned it into a metaphor for all sorts of things in American culture,â said Leo Braudy, a USC professor who last year published âHaunted: On Ghosts, Witches, Vampires, Zombies, and Other Monsters of the Natural and Supernatural Worlds.â
Up to this point, Braudy said, horror movies focused on individuals like Frankensteinâs monster, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. âThe zombie is unique because itâs part of a group representing the potential threat of a mass mind,â he said.
Romero solidified his reputation as a master of the genre with the sequel âDawn of the Dead,â which premiered in the U.S. in 1979 and became one of the most profitable independent productions in film history. The franchise would eventually encompass six films â" the first four, released decades apart, are one storyline.
ââNight of the Living Dead,â then âDawn of the Deadâ is a few weeks later, âDay of the Deadâ months later and âLand of the Deadâ is three years later,â Romero sa id. âEach one spoke about a different decade and was stylistically different. After âLand,â I wanted to do something about emerging media and citizen journalism.â
âNight of the Living Deadâ evoked Vietnam-era bloodshed and, with its black male lead trapped in a farmhouse, echoed some of the hysteria in the civil rights era. âDawn of the Deadâ poked fun at soul-deadening consumerism, and âDay of the Deadâ addressed ethics in science. In âLand of the Dead,â Romero tackled safety and boundaries, showing a community fortifying itself against a murderous horde while its wealthiest citizens keep alive class divisions.
But part of what made Romeroâs films so distinctive, no doubt, was their unbridled gore, which caused many of the movies to go unrated.
âI just donât shy away from it,â he said in a 2010 interview with The Times, noting that âthe old DC comic books were very, very graphic before the old Comics Code cleaned them up.
â Hard-core horror fans would like to see more and more of it. Itâs the fun part. Itâs the payoff. Itâs the downhill dip on the roller coaster.â
Romero did, however, draw a difference between his gore-for-purpose approach and new movies that he categorized as âtorture porn things.â
âTheyâre just mean-spirited and Grand Guignol all the way,â he said referencing an infamous Parisian theater that specialized in naturalistic horror shows. âI donât find any substance underlying it. I like to use horror as allegory.â
George Andrew Romero was born in the Bronx in New York City on Feb. 4, 1940. He attended Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, graduating in 1961 from the universityâs College of Fine Arts. He stayed in Pittsburgh for much of his feature film career.
In the years immediately after âNight of the Living Dead,â he made films that were less popular, including 1971âs âThereâs Always Vanilla,â 1973âs âThe Craziesâ and 1978âs âMartin.â
Between other âDeadâ films he directed the 1981 film âKnightriders,â starring Ed Harris; the 1988 movie âMonkey Shines,â his first studio-produced film, which introduced him to Grunwald; and âTwo Evil Eyes,â a 1990 horror film he made with Italian filmmaker Dario Argento inspired by Edgar Allan Poe short stories. His last credit as a writer was for his charactersâ appearance in 2017âs âDay of the Deadâ from director Hèctor Hernández Vicens.
The movies and TV shows that have taken their cues from Romeroâs work â" âWorld War Z,â â28 Days Later,â âShaun of the Deadâ â" seem almost too numerous to count. And though the popularity of something like âThe Walking Deadâ would seem to be a compliment to Romero, he once called that juggernaut âa soap opera with a zombie occasionally.
âI always used the zombie as a character for satire or a political criticism, and I find that missing in whatâs happening now,â he said in 2013.
But therein lies what set Romero apart, Braudy said.
âHe remained true to his outside Hollywood roots,â he said, calling the filmmaker a âtremendous influence on the independent film industry because he didnât have to be in Hollywood to make films that attracted wide audiences. He continues to be a lasting example of the idea that Hollywood needs to be reenergized from outside, independent perspectives.â
Romero is surv ived by his wife, his daughter, his son Andrew Romero and, from his earlier marriage to Christine Romero, his son Cam Romero.
Get your life! Follow me on Twitter (@TrevellAnderson) or email me: trevell.anderson@latimes.com.
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UPDATES:
7:25 p.m.: This story was updated with additional reaction to Romeroâs death, as well as comments about his legacy.
2:45 p.m. This story was updated with biographical information and quotes from Romero over the years.
This article was originally published at 2:05 p.m.
An earlier version of this story incorrectly gave the year of the film "Land of the Dead" as 1990. It was released in 2005.
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