Skip over navigation

Help

Night Of The Living Dead on DVD (1968)

Night Of The Living Dead cover art
Play Night Of The Living Dead trailer
Average rating: 74%
11133111420515
3.5
from 1,844 members
 
Starring: Judith O'Dea, Duane Jones, Karl Hardman, Keith Wayne, Russell Streiner, Marilyn Eastman, William Hinzman, Judith Reilly
Director: George A. Romero
Studio: CINEMA CLUB
Run time: 96 mins
Certificate: 18
User collections: Sweet and Sour, Greatest Horror Films., Best horror films ever, Dvds that have been censored/shortened in the U.K, Marvellous Monsters & Fantastic Fiends!, remakes mistakes, The Good...The Bad....& the Awful, Excellent Films, Screams Of Laughter, Zombie Zone
Genres: Horror
Languages: English
Subtitles: None
Released: 30/10/2000
Also Available on:  Also Available on: BLU-RAY

Brief synopsis of Night Of The Living Dead

In director George Romero's NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, seven people secluded in a Pennsylvania farmhouse face relentless attacks by reanimated corpses seeking to eat their flesh. The group, which includes a married couple and their daughter, a pair of young lovers, and an African American man, try to keep their sanity as the living dead try endlessly to enter the house until they are laid to rest by burning or a severe blow to the head. As they listen to news reports of the zombie plague taking over the eastern United States, the ever-decreasing band of survivors loses ground in their battle to both keep peace with one another and stay alive.
Romero's low-budget, homegrown classic went from being unable to find a distributor to becoming one of the most influential horror films of all time. Aside from its visceral impact years before realistic gore became the fashion, the film is also important for its portrayal of a black man as the protagonist during a time when race relations were an extremely sensitive issue in the United States. Romero's choice for the ending of his film also made a shocking and bold statement about the issue.

All DVDs in this series

Night Of The Living Dead - Feature
Sign up
Night Of The Living Dead - Bonus Features
Sign up

Screenshots

Related

Critics Reviews

Rating of 3 stars out of 5 Halliwell's Film Guide

Gruesome horror comic with effective moments; the director was still doing the same schtick ten years later. One of the most influential, and most imitated, of modern horror movies.

Time Out

With its radical rewriting of a genre in which good had always triumphed over evil, Romero's first feature shattered... Read more on www.timeout.com

Entertainment Weekly

"...Second only to PSYCHO among influential horror films..." -- Rating: A+

See all 3 Critics Reviews »

Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsThey're coming for you, Barbara...

trotsuk from LONDON , 24/05/2005

This is an essential piece of Cinema. The film that coined the expression 'Video Nasty'. Ok, so it looks a bit dated now, the acting's a bit hammy, but it was made in 196bloody8! Check out other horror films of this era and you'll see how graphic and controversal this film was. This film is as influential to modern horror films as the beatles are to modern pop music. And it's sequels only got better..

  13 out of 13 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all reviews

Rated - 1 starsDon't Rent

Josh Cluderay from York , 30/09/2005

It hasn't been mentioned clearly enough below that this is the '30th Anniversary Edition' of the film. The title is a misnomer, as it implies a celebration of the original film, rather than the truth - that John A. Russo (co-writer of the original) is doing the unthinkable and actually attempting to improve on it with new scenes and a different score. If the dead weren't already roaming the Earth they would be turning in their graves. Given the long tradition of crappy editions of NotLD, the last line in the film fairly accurately sums up this DVD - another one for the bonfire. This film is an abomination, do not rent it.

  8 out of 9 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all reviews

Rated - 4 starsSeminal horror

D Wiggins from Stafford , 16/07/2004

This film, the first of George A. Romero's 'Trilogy of the Dead', was the inspiration for almost countless zombie movies made in the 35-plus years since it was made.

The premise is simple and one we are probably all well acquainted with; the dead are coming back to life, attacking the living. Survivors in a remote part of America find refuge in an 'abandoned' house and must do their best to defend themselves until help arrives, hopefully in the form of some gun-happy yokels.

The claustrophobic camerawork, teamed with the general absence of a score (this is a very quiet film) and sporadic attacks from the zombies lend themselves brilliantly to the build up of tension.

The undead evoke an initial 'stupid-therefore-harmless' feeling. They are slow and seem easily escapable, but are relentless, stopping at nothing to get their fill of fresh human flesh, their lumbering becoming a taunting panic-inducing gesture -'I'm going to eat you! But I'll make you wait for it! Hahaha!' (not a quote, unfortunately).

This primary reaction to the idea of the dead being resurrected is unsettlingly joined by that of how we would deal with our loved ones becoming the exactly what we are trying to escape/defeat, our ability to empathise being called into question regularly.

Distracting at times, Night of the Living Dead can seem rather amateurish, the acting sometimes wooden, sometimes conversely hyperbolic, and occasionally in the same performance. In terms of production there is some form of a disclaimer in the opening credits, the fledgling talents of (if my memory serves me well) a college film team being utilised.

If you watch thinking that everything will be alright in the end; think again. The constituent films of this trilogy famously have very bleak endings, leading us to think, as Romero (although he more in social and moral terms) did; 'what will become of the human race?'.

  8 out of 10 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all reviews

Rated - 5 starsBrains!!!!

Lill Zee from Preston , 18/01/2006

My first experience of Romero was through a haze of smoke watching Dawn of the Dead on late night TV. Expecting the usual late night horror flick to wash over me as I lost interest and drifted into unconsciousness I was gripped by an altogether different experience. An experience which dragged me completely into his world and despite poor special effects by today’s standards evoked a true sense of dread which I shared with the main characters as they fought to preserve what they knew as their world dissolved around them.

So impressed with the second of Romero’s Dead quadrology that I had to explore the remaining films, and what better place to start than at the beginning. Night of the Living Dead throws you right in the mix straight away, he gives you no time to question what you are seeing around you just like the central characters all you can do is react! The lead character Ben is black not unusual in today’s films but much more significant in 1968. This fact now passes audiences straight by now times have changed for the better but it was these differences Romero sought to highlight. We all know zombies are stupid, slow, and clumsy and when whacked over their thick heads they die. We on the other hand are clever, we drive cars, play football and laminate our floors so what’s all the fuss about? Well zombies aren’t vain, their not prejudiced, their one united force with a common purpose, they want to eat our brains nothing else. In Romero’s films it’s your own personal decisions that become yours and everyone else’s undoing when faced with this ceaseless enemy. Very much the influence of the cold war drove this message but it still resonates today. The internal barriers in any society can be far more dangerous than any other external and some what vilified enemies, Bush and Saddam anyone? At a time when all Americas ills where blamed on Communism or the Civil Rights movement Romero reminded people that it was their society too and one day they would have to accept responsibility for it as individuals. Maybe the political landscape hasn’t changed quite so much in 40 years?

  4 out of 5 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all reviews

Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsThe one and only!

A customer from Bournemouth, England , 01/09/2005

The original master of zombie horror George A Romero's masterpiece. I dont think any zombie film since has come close to surpassing this triumph de resistence of the horror genre. Any horro fan worth their salt must see this!

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 5 starsBEST OF THE ZOMBIE FESTS!

A customer from UK , 06/11/2005

Horror master George A Romero's first film in his zombie series. In short, a virus starts to wake the dead. It seems as if the government are getting it under control, but, well, they're not. The plot is simple yet taut with tension but it's the execution that makes it!

Forget the newbies, go for the original, the best, the utter classic! It may be more than 30 years old but it's still got a real scare factor with some of the most terrifying zombie's you'll see!

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all highest rated reviews