Site Search:
 
Speak Korean Now!
Teach English Abroad and Get Paid to see the World!
Korean Job Discussion Forums Forum Index Korean Job Discussion Forums
"The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
 
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

See any posters for "Land of The Dead"?

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Korean Job Discussion Forums Forum Index -> General Discussion Forum
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
dulouz



Joined: 04 Feb 2003
Location: Uranus

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 5:22 am    Post subject: See any posters for "Land of The Dead"? Reply with quote

It opens June 24th. I want to see it but if it gets here, I can only imagine it'd be heavily censored.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
lastat06513



Joined: 18 Mar 2003
Location: Sensus amo Caesar , etiamnunc victus amo uni plebian

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 6:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think it would open in the US first and come to Korea some months later because of the censorship.
But I wouldn't be surprised if it ended up at yongsan station before anywhere else...in fact, i'll be looking for it!!!
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
dulouz



Joined: 04 Feb 2003
Location: Uranus

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 4:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Not Just Roaming, Zombies Rise Up

E-Mail This
Printer-Friendly


By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: June 24, 2005
In "George A. Romero's Land of the Dead," an excellent freakout of a movie, the living no longer have the advantage or our full sympathies. The fourth installment in Mr. Romero's vaunted zombie cycle (which began with his 1968 masterpiece, "Night of the Living Dead"), the new film is also the latest chapter in what increasingly seems like an extended riff on Dante's "Inferno."

In the earlier "Dead" films, Mr. Romero guided us through circles of hell that, despite the flesh-eating ghouls, looked a lot like the exurban world outside our windows. With this new movie, we jump straight to the ninth circle, where Satan is a guy in a suit and tie who feasts on the misery of others, much as the dead feast on the living.

Skip to next paragraph
Enlarge This Image

Michael Gibson/Universal Pictures
Big Daddy, played by Eugene Clark, leads a horde of zombies.

'Night of the Living Dead' (1968):
Movie Details | Trailer

'Dawn of the Dead' (1978):
Movie Details | Trailer

'Day of the Dead' (1985):
Movie Details | Trailer

Forum: Hollywood and Movie News

Enlarge This Image

Michael Gibson/Universal Pictures
An army of the dead in George A. Romero's new film.
It's a sign of both Mr. Romero's waggish humor and control as a director that the guy in the suit and tie is played by the cult-movie icon Dennis Hopper, an often unrestrained performer who here is right on the money. Mr. Hopper plays Mr. Kaufman, the absolute ruler of a haven called Fiddler's Green, a tower of steel and glass at the center of a city with more than a passing resemblance to Manhattan. The tower, which appears to have been modeled on a Vegas hotel, complete with the usual feedlots, luxury stores and glassy-eyed shoppers, rises above the devastated metropolis like a threat and a promise. Outside its locked doors, amid atmospheric squalor, the huddling masses distract themselves with bread and circuses, while one man agitates for revolution. Beyond: zombieland.

Although they've always had a strong political subtext, Mr. Romero's zombie movies, which also include "Dawn of the Dead" (1978) and "Day of the Dead" (1985), have emphasized praxis over philosophy. To that end, the living hero of this film isn't the agitator, but a no-nonsense tough, Riley, played by the fine young Australian actor Simon Baker. Best known for the television show "The Guardian," he has done exceptional work in both "L.A. Confidential" and "Ride With the Devil," and in this film he holds the center with an attractive lack of fuss. His character is one of those burned-out warriors who says he wants to pack it in, only to be coerced back into action. This may partly explain why Mr. Romero, who hasn't made a zombie movie in two decades, shines such a sympathetic light on him.

There aren't a lot of people in "Land of the Dead" whom the director likes as much as he does Riley, or for that matter, his zombie alter ego, Big Daddy (Eugene Clark). We meet Riley and Big Daddy after an attention-seeking credit sequence that recaps the zombie situation to date ("They kill for one reason. They kill for food.") and brings us straight to "Today." Here, in a wasteland called Uniontown, next to a diner sign emblazoned with the word "EATS," Riley and his sidekick, Charlie (Robert Joy), watch as Big Daddy, dressed in a gas-station attendant's uniform, tries to go through the work motions. Riley is struck by the zombie's commitment to its old rituals; but what gets his attention is that this itinerant corpse seems to be communicating with other zombies.

A pioneer in the slow-zombie movement (think of him as the Alice Waters of contemporary horror), Mr. Romero has not joined the recent fad for zippy corpses, as seen in both "28 Days Later" and the remake of "Dawn of the Dead." Mr. Romero's monsters still move at a relatively lethargic pace, dragging their dead weight as if they were made of lead, not putrefying flesh. What has changed since corpses roamed the cemetery in "Night of the Living Dead" crudely pockmarked with sores and dripping movie blood is the special-effects makeup, which in the new film is alternately frightfully real and obscenely beautiful. Here, Mr. Romero, whose striking parking-lot exteriors in "Dawn of the Dead" looked like they were designed by Ed Ruscha, creates gruesome demons right out of Bosch and Goya.

The story more or less takes the shape of an extended chase scene, in which the living and the zombies alternate between their roles as hunters and hunted. Riley, who's anxious to split for Canada (where the film was actually shot), to find a land without borders and zombies, works salvaging supplies from outside the city. Inside an armored vehicle ordained Dead Reckoning, he and his crew, whose numbers include Cholo (an exceptionally good John Leguizamo), search the zombie-infested badlands for food and medical supplies. For Cholo and some of the others, there's much fun to be had popping wheelies on motorcycles while blowing holes through the zombies, even if the ghouls, still dressed in the clothes in which they died - a cheerleader's outfit, a butcher's apron - look uncomfortably human.

Neither fully alive nor dead, zombies exist between the margins, in a twilight state that makes them among the most unsettling of all man-made creatures. That's the essential paradox of all zombie movies, but it's a paradox that has taken on increasing complexity in Mr. Romero's zombie quartet. In "Night of the Living Dead," the zombies were more or less indistinguishable rotting-meat puppets. Like animals, they were also beyond good and evil, eating simply because they were hungry. (And zombies, of course, are always hungry.) This first film centers on a cluster of people holed up in a farmhouse surrounded by the dead. The hero is a black man who tries to save everyone only to end up dead, shot by a posse that, as Mr. Romero makes clear in the devastating finale, is little more than a lynch mob.

With each of Mr. Romero's zombie movies, the walking dead have grown progressively more human while the living have slowly lost touch with their humanity. One thing that has always distinguished Mr. Romero's films, not only from the horror-genre pack but from so many action flicks, is that the director knows killing is killing. The chilling cackling of the posse at the end of "Night of the Living Dead" reverberates through the bombed-out landscapes in "Land of the Dead" from the start, as one zombie after another bites the dust. Mr. Romero can make you jump out of your seat with the best of them, but the greatest shock here may be the transformation of a black zombie into a righteous revolutionary leader (I guess Che really does live, after all).

With "Revenge of the Sith" and "Batman Begins," "Land of the Dead" makes the third studio release of the summer season to present an allegory, either naked or not, of our contemporary political landscape. Whatever else you think about these films, whether you believe them to be sincere or cynical, authentic expressions of defiance or just empty posturing, it is rather remarkable that these so-called popcorn movies have gone where few American films outside the realm of documentary, including most so-called independents, dare to go. One of the enormous pleasures of genre filmmaking is watching great directors push against form and predictability, as Mr. Romero does brilliantly in "Land of the Dead." One thing is for sure: You won't go home hungry.
Not Just Roaming, Zombies Rise Up


Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Butterfly



Joined: 02 Mar 2003
Location: Kuwait

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 4:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

lastat06513 wrote:
I think it would open in the US first and come to Korea some months later because of the censorship.
But I wouldn't be surprised if it ended up at yongsan station before anywhere else...in fact, i'll be looking for it!!!


Me too, it looks wicked. http://www.upcominghorrormovies.com/trailers.php#twilight,
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
krats1976



Joined: 14 May 2003

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 4:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Can't find it on CGV's website, not that that means anything since they said "Hitchhiker's Guide" was coming last week, then dropped it last minute. GRRRR Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
buddy bradley



Joined: 24 Aug 2003
Location: The Beyond

PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 10:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's the ridiculous, biased Korean movie quota system that will probably prevent us from seeing it on the big screen here.

That, and the fact that Koreans hate zombie movies because it reminds them of their parents too much.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website AIM Address Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger
Tiberious aka Sparkles



Joined: 23 Jan 2003
Location: I'm one cool cat!

PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 1:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's been getting some very good reviews from critics who "get" the genre. Apparently it isn't as gory as its predecessors, and there are some "digital" zombies that are superimposed over some of the more gruesome scenes (think 'Eyes Wide Shut' and the orgy). This was done by Romero to appease the studio heads, but no doubt there will be an "unrated" DVD version.

Sparkles*_*
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Visit poster's website
dulouz



Joined: 04 Feb 2003
Location: Uranus

PostPosted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 7:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have the .mpg's. PM for info.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Korean Job Discussion Forums Forum Index -> General Discussion Forum All times are GMT - 8 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


This page is maintained by the one and only Dave Sperling.
Contact Dave's ESL Cafe
Copyright © 2018 Dave Sperling. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group

TEFL International Supports Dave's ESL Cafe
TEFL Courses, TESOL Course, English Teaching Jobs - TEFL International