Chicago Sun-Times

‘ Night of the Living Dead’ director set the standard for zombie films

GEORGE ROMERO | 1940- 2017

- BYJAKE COYLE AP FilmWriter

NEW YORK — George Romero, whose classic “Night of the Living Dead” and other horror films turned zombie movies into social commentari­es and who saw his flesh- devouring undead spawn countless imitators, remakes and homages, has died. He was 77.

Mr. Romero died Sunday following a battle with lung cancer, said his family in a statement provided by his manager Chris Roe. Mr. Romero’s family said he died while listening to the score of “The Quiet Man,” one of his favorite films, with his wife, Suzanne Desrocher, and daughter, Tina Romero, by this side.

Mr. Romero is credited with reinventin­g the movie zombie with his directoria­l debut, the 1968 cult classic, “Night of the Living Dead.” The movie set the rules imitators lived by: Zombies move slowly, lust for human flesh and can only be killed when shot in the head. If a zombie bites a human, the person dies and returns as a zombie.

Romero’s zombies, however, were always more than mere cannibals. They were metaphors for conformity, racism, mall culture, militarism, class difference­s and other social ills.

“The zombies, they could be anything,” Mr. Romero told The Associated Press in 2008. “They could be an avalanche, they could be a hurricane. It’s a disaster out there. The stories are about how people fail to respond in the proper way. They fail to address it. They keep trying to stick where they are, instead of recognizin­g maybe this is too big for us to try to maintain. That’s the part of it that I’ve always enjoyed.”

“Night of the Living Dead,” made for about $ 100,000, featured fleshhungr­y ghouls trying to feast on humans holed up in a Pennsylvan­ia house. In 1999, the Library of Congress inducted the black- and- white masterpiec­e into the National Registry of Films.

Mr. Romero’s death was immediatel­y felt across a wide spectrum of horror fans and filmmakers. Stephen King, whose “The Dark Half” was adapted by Romero, called him his favorite collaborat­or and said, “Therewill never be another like you.” Guillermo del Toro called the loss “enormous.”

Mr. Romero’s influence could be seen across decades of American movies, from John Carpenter to Edgar Wright to Jordan Peele, the “Get Out” filmmaker. Many considered “Night of the Living Dead” to be a critique on racism in America. The sole black character survives the zombies, but he is fatally shot by rescuers. Peele on Sunday tweeted a photo of that character, played by Duane Jones, and wrote: “Romero started it.”

Ten years after “Night of the Living Dead,” Mr. Romero made “Dawn of the Dead,” where human survivors take refuge from the undead in a mall and then turn on each other as the zombies stumble around.

Film critic Roger Ebert called it “one of the best horror films ever made — and, as an inescapabl­e result, one of the most horrifying. It is gruesome, sickening, disgusting, violent, brutal and appalling. It is also . . . brilliantl­y crafted, funny, droll, and savagely merciless in its satiric view of the American consumer society.”

George Andrew Romero was born on Feb. 4, 1940, in New York City. He grew up in the Bronx, and he was a fan of horror comics and movies in the pre- VCR era.

“I grew up at the Loews American in the Bronx,” he wrote in an issue of the British Film Institute’s Sight and Sound magazine in 2002.

His favorite film was Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburge­r’s “The Tales of Hoffman,” based on Jacques Offenbach’s opera. It was, he once wrote, “the one movie that made me want to make movies.”

He spoke fondly of traveling to Manhattan to rent a 16mm version of the film from a distributi­on house. When the film was unavailabl­e, Mr. Romero said, it was because another “kid” had rented it— Martin Scorsese.

Mr. Romero graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh in 1960. He learned the movie business working on the sets of movies and “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” which was shot in Pittsburgh.

The city became Mr. Romero’s home, and many of his films were set in western Pennsylvan­ia.

 ?? | AMY SANCETTA/ AP ?? George Romero ( shown in 2008), who made “Night of the Living Dead” for $ 100,000 died listening to the score of “The Quiet Man,” his family said.
| AMY SANCETTA/ AP George Romero ( shown in 2008), who made “Night of the Living Dead” for $ 100,000 died listening to the score of “The Quiet Man,” his family said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States