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#zombie films
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darkhorrorblog · 8 months
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Day of the dead
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girlsagainstg0d · 2 years
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So I started watching 28 Weeks later, and all I have to say is that, that is the most embarrassing type of zombie to be. It's not even "euuughhh brains" it's literally fucking "Oo oo ah ah infected by monkey rage" if that was me, I wouldn't have it. I'd die twice, once from the virus, once out of shame.
Despite popular opinion, this is the most intense first 10 minutes of a zombie film I have ever seen. But I don't like zombie films so I don't watch a lot of them.
Side note:
Zombie films terrify me. It's not like "Jumpscares omg" terrify me, it's more "I feel sick to my stomach". The only zombie films/TV Show I have ever felt comfortable with is The Walking Dead and Shaun Of The Dead.
I just don't like the idea of the world being taken over by undead creatures, y'know?
nvm I'm literally watching the wrong fucking film LMFAOO
anyways just gonna rewatch AHS
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zakkura · 2 years
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It’s always a Korean Zombie Film / series that makes me cry and I dunno what that says about me.
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Night of the Comet
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Before Buffy, there was Regina (Catherine Mary Stewart), the valley girl who, with her sister (Kelli Maroney), manages to miss the comet display that turns most of the world into red dust and many of the survivors into zombies. They’re the heroines of writer-director Thom Eberhardt’s engaging ‘80s explosion NIGHT OF THE COMET (1984, Criterion Channel, Tubi). Although they’re skilled and inventive fighters, the two often seem to be facing the apocalypse with big hair, hot threads and the latest tunes. Perhaps the most ‘80s moment in the film is their trip to a downtown L.A. mall to try on new clothes to the tune of “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” (without Cindy Lauper, as the film’s low budget would only allow for a cover). Along the way they meet trucker Robert Beltran (and who wouldn’t want to rebuild civilization with him), evil scientist Geoffrey Lewis and enigmatic scientist Mary Woronow. The film seems slow by contemporary standards. There are a few too many shots of empty streets and the leads driving around. But the rest of the time it’s a lot of fun, with a quirky, improvisatory feel. Maroney was a young actress with a lot of good resources. She gets some sly laughs by throwing away one-liners, and when she grieves for the friends who have turned into so much red smog, you believe her. Woronov, who wrote her final scene, is electric. She can brood compellingly and always seems to be hiding some painful secret. It’s a pity she never got into a really good neo-noir.
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james-master · 6 months
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31 Days of Horror: Night of the Living Dead (1968)
Every year on Halloween, I watch Night of the Living Dead (1968). It’s a tradition of mine. I absolutely love this film. For so many reasons, this film tops my list of favorite horror films. It’s easily in my top five films of all time. If you’ve been living under a rock for the past 55 years, Night of the Living Dead is the film that started the entire Zombie genre. Directed by George A. Romero…
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junkyarddemento · 7 months
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Ever wonder what's running through what's left of a zombie's brain...err, mind? If you answered 'Yes' then this film tries to provide you with an answer. What better way to kick off the month of October, the Halloween season, than with a zombie film?!! The impressive makeup work and cinematography really help this film stand out from the constant sludge of generic zombie stories one can find on the web.
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taekwondolifemagazine · 7 months
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Gangnam Zombie is a Unique Taekwondo Zombie Flik
Gangnam Zombie is a Unique Taekwondo Zombie Flik #GangnamZombie @wellgousa
Gangnam Zombie is a Unique Taekwondo Zombie Flik September 30, 2023 (NYC)–   Gangnam Zombie is a Unique Taekwondo Zombie Flik.  A Look at Gangnam Zombie, a martial arts film of South Korean origin-available on Digital, Blu-ray, and DVD now!   Here is a synopsis and review of this Well Go USA Entertainment release. SYNOPSIS: Soon after previously normal people begin viciously attacking other…
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bbreakingbenjamin · 7 months
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𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐢𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐡𝐨𝐫𝐫𝐨𝐫 𝐬𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐟𝐚𝐧𝐝𝐨𝐦 😂☠️🗡️
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firstapo · 7 months
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Those zombies are just the poor souls you drained! They were just trying to warn us so that we wouldn't suffer the same fate they did!
SCOOBY DOO ON ZOMBIE ISLAND 1998 — dir. Jim Stenstrum, Hiroshi Aoyama, Kazumi Fukushima
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nightmaregirl · 2 months
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Xx
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ho1000c · 4 months
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House of 1000 Corpses
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cemeterything · 1 month
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How so-called "Died and came back wrong" fans look when real zombie horror comes at them:
if more zombie horror focused more on the "died and came back wrong" aspect and less on jumpscares and guys in halloween makeup screaming and biting people and jerking the camera around i would enjoy them more
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violetbudd · 7 months
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House of 1000 corpses (2003)
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not-from-your-town · 10 months
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1996 [x]
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Cemetery of Terror
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You’re planning to go to a rock concert, but a desperately horny medical student whose circle of friends only includes other desperately horny medical students, invites you to what he calls a jet set party filled with actors, celebrities and “people in limousines.” Which do you pick? Given half a brain, you’d stick with the concert, but then you wouldn’t be able to help drive the cockamamy plot of Ruben Galindo, Jr.’s nonsensical CEMETERY OF TERROR (1985, Shudder,  AMC+). The film actually opens well. The camera moves through a dirty room to catch a man (Hugo Stiglitz) asleep in a chair as he dreams of a serial killer taken down by the police. That sequence is eerie, with some imaginative shots and good use of a hand-held camera. And whenever Galindo throws in hand-held shots the film gets a lift. But then there’s the plot. When the young women discover the desperately horny medical students have taken them to a deserted mansion for sex, they’re not giving out. One of the men finds a book of satanic rituals in the attic (as one so often does) and decides they can get the girls in the mood by stealing a dead body, taking it to the nearby cemetery and pretending to raise it from the dead. And it works on both counts. Of course, the body they steal is the serial killer who just happens to be the owner of the house and the book of satanic rituals. Who’d a thunk it? So it’s your basic supernatural slasher, and to one-up the genre, Galindo has him kill all the partyers, with one kill lifted directly from the original HALLOWEEN (1978). The killer dispatches them rather quickly (with the help of some hitherto unsuspected telekinetic powers), which would make for a blessedly short film, but there’s also a group of children who decide to celebrate Halloween by cavorting in the cemetery. The killer starts chasing them, and just to keep things at the appropriate level of WTF, he also brings all the dead bodies in the cemetery back to life. This is all padded with endless shots of the kids running around and Stiglitz (remember him? Turns out he was the killer’s psychiatrist) driving around in a stolen police car to keep the dead man from coming back to life (oops!). I have to admit, however, that laughing at this film was a lot more enjoyable than suffering through some big-budget attempts at serious filmmaking. GANDHI anyone? I didn’t think so.
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