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Land of the Dead Details

2005 Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 23,468 members

Zombie movies slip in and out of fashion, but it's always a special occasion when the man who helped turn the undead into a worldwide phenomenon decides to add an instalment to his ongoing saga of flesh-eating films. George A. Romero's zombie movies have all appeared in different decades, beginning with NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD .. Read more

Starring Simon Baker, John Leguizamo, Dennis Hopper, Asia Argento
Director George A. Romero
Genres Horror

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Land of the Dead

Zombie movies slip in and out of fashion, but it's always a special occasion when the man who helped turn the undead into a worldwide phenomenon decides to add an instalment to his ongoing saga of flesh-eating films. George A. Romero's zombie movies have all appeared in different decades, beginning with NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD in 1968, DAWN OF THE DEAD in '78, and DAY OF THE DEAD in '85. Romero skipped the '90s, but a zombie renaissance in the early 21st century (28 DAYS LATER, SHAUN OF THE DEAD) finds him back in the directors chair. Often seen as allegories for their times, Romero's films have been connected to societal events such as the consumerism of the '70s (DAWN OF THE DEAD) and the spread of the AIDS virus in the '80s (DAY OF THE DEAD). With 2005's LAND OF THE DEAD, Romero positions the bulk of his story in a giant skyscraper which houses the last humans left on the planet; although his intentions are foggy this time, LAND appears to be Romero's commentary on the post-9/11 political landscape. The zombies only bother crews who venture outside the makeshift city for supplies, but the people are kept sedated by their leader, the irascible Kaufman (Dennis Hopper), who exaggerates their threat. What Kaufman doesn't realise is that the zombies are learning skills they half-remember from their old selves, leading to some impressively blood-soaked scenes of tumult. In an unusual move for Romero, Hopper is joined by name actors such as John Leguizamo and Asia Argento. The film greatly benefits as a result, successfully portraying an atrophied civilisation that has regressed to a primitive state, allowing its undead tormentors to sense that a free lunch may be just around the corner.

Starring Simon Baker, John Leguizamo, Dennis Hopper, Asia Argento
Director George A. Romero
Studio UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK VIDEO RENTAL
Run time Blu-ray: 1 hr 37 mins
HD DVD: 1 hr 37 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Horror
Language DVD: English
Blu-ray: English
HD DVD: English
Released DVD: 26 Dec 2005
Blu-ray: 01 Dec 2008
HD DVD: 29 Oct 2007
Production year: 2005
Format DVD
  • Most helpful member's review of Land of the Dead

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  • 35 out of 41 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    FUN!

    So Land of The Dead eh?

    I liked it.

    Yes it lacks some of the doomed fatalism of the other films, and yes it is very glossy (of course it is going to be pretty polished looking, they have a bigger budget than the last 3 put together, turbo-modern effects, and an A-List cast). But the claims that it scrimps on the gore and waters down the concept and content for a resident evil weaned teen audience are just a load of old rot.

    Heads explode (man can those motherf**kers pop a skull), screaming victims get torn apart by armies of decaying ghouls, yard after yard of slimy wet innards get yummed up, there really are some grotesquely inventive eviscerations on show here. The screen is regularly awash with gore. He may have higher production values this time out, but Romero has not gone soft.

    Land of The Dead is a tight, well-paced, well-executed entertainment; it’s a coffin-load of fun. Most surprisingly of all, the self aware and sympathetically presented zombies angle that they are going for that had filled my heart with fear (I really did think it was going to be total gash) kinda works. My friends and I often found our selves going “aw poor zombies” (tellingly Romero’s Black hero character that features in each film in the cycle is a zombie this time out, we are not supposed to root for the humans).

    Despite a fairly bland and generic human hero (who has some fu*king excretable lines in the last scene), the cast and characters are all uniformly amusing (Argento, Hopper and Leguzamo et al all perform nicely), with snappy dialogue and likeable quirks (the Samoan squaddie’s every line is priceless “I came here to do something. Why are we standing around? Lets do something.”)

    The heavy handed social commentary is all present and accounted for, Savini gets a cameo, it feels like a worthy addition to the series…

    yeah there are naysayers but f*ck em, they are wrong. I am seeing it again next week and thoroughly looking forward to it.

      • A customer from camden
  • Most recent members' review of Land of the Dead

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Remember George Romero created the Screen Zombie

    Let's not forget that George A Romero, accomplished Director in other movies albeit some poorer efforts like any other director, is the man who made the screen zombie. I'm puzzled that anyone claiming to be a fan of his would even consider a comment that claims the DOTD remake was better than this or any other of George's Dead series. Plus folks, remember Shaun of the Dead excellent as it was is a ROMZOMCOM movie, not to be compared with this, come on!!

    Anyway, onto this film, of course I can understand fans being disapointed with this one but remember this film only had a big budget and big distribution compared to the other 3 films because the studio wants profit, that means the Director's independant input is constrained but the result is still a good addition to the series.

    Hopper is suberb as the neo-conservative style ruler of the human zone, running the show with the ultimate right wing agenda of protecting what one has at all costs and holding onto power. The rest of the cast supports well and I still felt it had the smallish feel of Day regards the compact cast and minimal locations.

    Good point by another reviewer though that it's disapointing how quickly the zombies 'evolve' in this one, good idea but too quickly turned around. The gore is still great but very brief when it occurs, hope for a smidgin more in DVD releases, an 18 cert would do that!

    Only seen it once so it'll only get better, George has still got it, a must for Romero fans or those now interested in zombie movies since their re-introduction in the last 5 years!!!

      • David H from Gourock, Scotland
  • News and features

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    Diary of the Dead

    Diary of the Dead

    • 03 Mar 2008

    Zombie maestro George A Romero proves us all wrong again: you really can flog a dead horse. Just watch that it doesn't bite you back. This isn't exactly a sequel to the unfolding Night of the Living Dead series (so far 68-year-old Romero has given us Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead and Land of the Dead, and not a dud among them). Rather, it takes us back to square one and the very first night. The diary idea is similar to the first-person point of view in Cloverfield and The Blair Witch... Read more

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Rating breakdown

23,468 Member ratings
  • 100
916
  • 90
1,187
  • 80
2,385
  • 70
3,394
  • 60
4,882
  • 50
3,498
  • 40
2,992
  • 30
2,028
  • 20
1,459
  • 10
727

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