Asia Argento Movie:

George A. Romeros Land of the Dead Unrated Directors Cut



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Asia Argento Movie:
George A. Romeros Land of the Dead Unrated Directors Cut



Movie
George A. Romero's Land of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut)
George A. Romero
List Price: $12.98Label: Universal Home Entertainment

Salesrank: 6348

Released: October 18, 2005
Our Price: $2.99
Used Price: $0.87
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Director's Cut
  • Dolby
  • DTS Surround Sound
  • Dubbed
  • DVD
  • Full Screen
  • Subtitled
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • John Leguizamo
  • Asia Argento
  • Simon Baker
  • Dennis Hopper
  • Robert Joy
  • Editorial Review:
    Legendary filmmaker George A. Romero returns to unleash his new zombie masterpiece! Starring Simon Baker, Dennis Hopper and John Leguizamo, Romero’s latest undead epic finds humanity’s last remnants battling to survive the unspeakable truth: The ravenous zombie hordes besieging their fortified city…are evolving!

    Description of George A. Romero's Land of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut):
    Bolstered by the success of 28 Days Later, Shaun of the Dead, the Resident Evil movies and the hit remake of his own Dawn of the Dead, George A. Romero returns to the horror subgenre he invented with Land of the Dead. The fourth installment in Romero's zombie cycle (and the first since 1985's Day of the Dead) presents a logical progression of events since 1968's horror classic Night of the Living Dead: Zombies (also known as "stenches" for their rotting odor) are the dominant population, and they've begun to show signs of undead intelligence and gathering power. The wealthiest survivors live comfortably in a luxury high-rise within a barricaded safe zone, ignoring the horrors of the outside world while armed scavengers stage raids in the zombie-zone to gather much-needed food and supplies. Simon Baker and John Leguizamo play mercenaries-for-hire; Dennis Hopper is their nefarious boss; and horror favorite Asia Argento (daughter of Suspiria director Dario Argento) plays a former hooker recruited into Baker's scavenger squad. While none of this seems particularly fresh or inspired, Land of the Dead benefits from hints of the social satire that made Romero's earlier zombie films so memorable. Not so much funny as gruesomely peculiar, Romero's plot isn't as inventive as it could've been, but as a big-scale B-movie, Land of the Dead delivers a handful of shocks and horror-celebrity cameos (including gore-masters Tom Savini and Greg Nicotero) that should keep horror buffs happy until the next zombie opus comes along. --Jeff Shannon

    George A. Romero's Land of the Dead (Unrated Director's Cut) Reviews:
    very good and fun horror pic 4 Star Review
    2009-11-28 - while not quite on a par with NIGHT and DAWN , "LAND OF THE DEAD" is smart and fun . a solid cast and typically good writing and direction by ROMERO make this outing pretty much comperable to the very good DAY . don't know why this one devides folks so ? (the zombies can reason ?) . it's a "talkie" for goodness sakes . get over it .

    As A Zombie O.K. But Also With Some Loopholes As Well 3 Star Review
    2009-11-27 - This was one of the standard George Romero zombie movies with the usual shambling somewhat slow zombies that in the movie would eat living humans in very gory and bloody ways to satisfy any longtime zombie fan but some of the storyplot is pretty weak as well. The one part I felt was a little weird was when you had the group of disgruntled scouts who when one of them is denied a position in the upper echelon of the cities important class decides to steal the armor vehicle and try and blackmail the leader of the isolated city into giving him money was somewhat idiotic, yes for an isolated city surrounded by the walking undead there has to be some way to maintain a sense of trade an commerce between the living people in the city for certain possessions but come on. I mean even if the people trying extort the money get away where are they going to go and spend the money on in a world almost completely taken over by the undead? The acting from the main characters is very decent though and Dennis Hopper as always gives a great show in his movies but at the end it's pretty much what anyone who looks at the cover knows, and that is it's a flesh-eating zombie movie for anyone who wants to see the blood and gore of people been eaten an the like but don't expect to much more from the movie itself such as a great storyline or the like...

    The Mentalist vs. Big Daddy and friends . . . 4 Star Review
    2009-11-23 - Featuring an army of zombies, and ample gore, George Romero's zombie saga continues in Land of the Dead (2005), where the vicious and bloody war with the undead, evolves to a new level.

    Humans are barricaded inside a section of a city, that is surrounded by water. They are safe, because the zombies don't cross water, but that's about to change. While the peons dwell on the streets, the privileged elite reside inside a high class luxury building called Fiddler's Green. Among them is Kaufman (Dennis Hopper), administrator of the supplies department, a group that leaves the safety of the city to forage for supplies in zombieland. Riley Denbo (Simon Baker, The Mentalist) leads the supplies group, scrounging among the hoards of the undead, who have an insatiable hunger for human flesh.

    Cholo (John Leguizamo) a member of the supplies team, steals 'Dead Reckoning', a heavily armored vehicle used on supply runs, after Kaufman shoots down his bid to become a resident in 'The Green'. With Cholo holding the vehicle for ransom, Kaufman sends Riley, and his pal Charlie (Robert Joy), ex-streetwalker Slack (Asia Argento) along with his team of mercenaries to try and get the vehicle back.

    Meanwhile Big Daddy (Eugene Clark), who ran a service station before joining the ranks of the undead, has begun to take a leadership role. Soon the zombies are on the march, and nothing can stop them.

    With headshots, bodies torn open and guts ripped out, decapitations, and limbs being pull off and munched on, Land of the Dead delivers tons of explicit gore. Dispatching the 'stenches' is so routine for the supplies team, that inattention and carelessness results in team casualties. A bit of a self confident know it all, unphased by anything, Denbo's demeanor is reminiscent of Patrick Jane, the character Baker plays in The Mentalist, a guy who tries to maneuver and outthink people. Kaufman represents the privilege of wealth, looking to survive any way he can, while Cholo contributes the most, to what little real emotion there is. It is chaos when the zombies attack 'The Green', though more mayhem could have been done. The same goes for Dead Reckoning, where the full destructive potential is not fully realized.

    Land of the Dead has lots of extras, including various featurettes, and a commentary track with George Romero, editor Michael Daughtery, and producer Peter Grunwald. The unrated director's cut is a slightly longer and has a little more gore. Those interested in Romero's continuing zombie saga should be sure to check this out. The violence and gore are definitely there, though the story may or may not satisfy.

    A very good film, but a below average Living Dead installment 3 Star Review
    2009-11-01 - To begin with, there's nothing wrong with this film. Strong directing and camera work, solid acting, nice special effects, and an interesting setting/premise work together to create a post-apocalyptic zombie film that is fun, borderline thought-provoking, and keeps one's interest throughout. However, as an installment in Romero's Living Dead series, it fails to hold its own.

    In each of the previous Living Dead installments, Romero brought something new to the human drama, even while the basic premise essentially stayed the same. In the first film, it was an issue of humans having to work together in a crisis (with strong racial issues implied throughout). In the second film, there was a more analytical exploration of quality of life as a band of survivors is forced to confront loneliness, lack of purpose, and excessive consumerism. In the third film, man's inhumanity to man was explored in a far more merciless way and, as a side note, Romero showed that the zombies were capable of evolving into relatively benign and compassionate creatures, thus raising the question of who the real monsters were.

    The problem is that Land of the Dead fails to add anything to this. Man is still being inhuman to man (though not in as compelling and terrifying a way), and the bit about the zombies evolving is forced down our throat like its a new idea. The human city is an interesting setting for a zombie film, and the armored tank ("Dead Reckoning") is certainly cool, but amidst all of the bells and whistles that make up this film, there is no true insight into the human condition at its core. Rich people are evil and mentally challenged people can be useful. That's all the film seems to say. There's a muddled message about terrorism in there somewhere too, but it's not of Romero's usual caliber.

    Of course my biggest gripe with this film has nothing to do with its quality at all. I've been a Romero fan since I was a kid, and in all those years, across multiple viewings of each film prior to this one, it was always my understanding that the zombie disease was passed like a virus. A zombie bit you and BAM, you became a zombie too. In the first film, scrambling scientists speculate that extra-terrestrial radiation has caused all of the dead to rise, but I always assumed we weren't supposed to accept that explanation. After all, nowhere in any of the films do we ever see someone die of natural causes and then re-animate. All deaths are caused by zombies.

    However, toward the beginning of LAND, a man hangs himself and immediately reanimates. It's entirely incidental to the plot, but it shatters mine and many people's forty year old misconception. I suppose this shouldn't make a big deal, but it does. Romero's basic premise is therefore no different than Ed Wood's in Plan 9 from Outer Space. Personally, I feel there's something far more compelling and exciting about the viral premise. The idea that one "patient zero" could start a global pandemic of this proportion fascinates me and somehow makes the outlandish premise just a little more believable than the idea that the dead are rising everywhere. I was the kind of kid that used to play Sim City, and my favorite part would be starting a fire in one building and seeing how fast it could spread across the city. No, I'm not a sadist or a delinquent. I'm a normal guy who is fascinated by destructive domino effects; how quickly one small occurrence can send ripples across cities, countries, and even continents. Land of the Dead has killed all of that for me. It's taken something away from the old Living Dead films that I used to get so much more out of.

    So, in the end, Land of the Dead is a solid zombie post-apocalypse film, but if you love Romero's Living Dead films for the same reasons that I do, this is a film that you may choose to skip.

    Not as good as Diaries of the Dead... 3 Star Review
    2009-08-24 - If you love George Romero and/or love zombie flicks in general, you will like this. Visually appealing. Not quite as epic as Dawn of the Dead. Few things are. ;)










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