Boston

Zombie legend: George Romero

George Romero

It’s remarkable how the living dead have defined the post-millennium zeitgeist more than any other pop-culture entity. 

From Max Brooks’ bestselling novel “World War Z” (an upcoming film adaptation will star Brad Pitt) to a glut of first-person shooter video games to mainstream TV, the zombie has mysteriously reached the peak of his popularity.

But it’s been a long, slow progression — a road littered with taboo and terror — and most of it can be traced back to the brain of one man, the master of zombie lore, George A. Romero.

It was Romero who, in 1968, took the basic thrust of Richard Matheson’s shattering vampire apocalypse novel “I Am Legend” and brought the dead back to life with his game-changing black-and-white masterpiece “Night of the Living Dead.”

That film would spawn a series of rip-offs, sequels and eventually spoofs like Edgar Wright’s smash-hit comedy “Shaun of the Dead.”

Look anywhere and you’ll see evidence of the zombie phenomenon surrounding us, trapping us, ready to eat us alive.

And that is what’s so spooky about the concept of the zombie. They’re us, back from our final rest, hungry to devour the people we once loved. Zombies are ugly, grotesque shadows of their former selves. Zombies are not nice, and if, by some sort of biologically bad stroke of viral luck, Romero’s fantastical prophecies were to come true, what would we do? Or more importantly, what shouldn’t we do?

Do not attempt to out-swim the dead

Zombies aren’t bears. As a few unfortunate characters in Romero’s 2010 horror-western “Survival of the Dead” discover, they aren’t afraid of the water. Why? Because they don’t have to hold their breath — they don’t breathe.

Romero: I had underwater stuff in “Land” and “Diary” but really played with it here. There is a lot of humor in “Survival,” but it’s also really melancholic, less free-and-easy. Though at this stage of my life, I’m thinking of calling the next one — if there is a next one — “Enough of the Dead”!

Do not take the elevator

In Romero’s incredibly influential 1978 epic “Dawn of the Dead,” a handful of survivors land their helicopter on the roof of Pittsburgh’s Monroeville Mall and block out the corpses, creating a Shangri-la of material bliss. But when the ghouls gain entrance as they always do, chaos ensues. It was successfully remade a few years back.

Romero: “Dawn” is a romp, and I think it’s the most entertaining of all the “Dead” films. I really cut loose and did it as “comic book.” But there’s tragedy in there, too.

Do not marginalize or exploit the dead

Romero’s post-“Dawn” remake comeback, 2005’s “Land of the Dead,” saw the late Dennis Hopper as a capitalist swine who allows his fellow Republicans to hide in his multimillion-dollar condo while the dead population are hunted and slaughtered beyond his electrified fences.

Romero: I think [“Land”] was the first time mainstream American critics saw the satire of my work, and I owe it all to George Bush! I think it’s all there when Hopper says the line: “We do not negotiate with terrorists.”


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
News

Three dead in roof collapse at Cambodian factory…

Three people were killed when the ceiling of a warehouse fell in at a shoe factory in Cambodia, a government minister said, adding to concern…

National

Tornadoes rip through Texas, killing six

At least six people were killed and scores more injured when tornadoes ripped through a stretch of Texas near Dallas-Fort Worth after dark last night,…

Entertainment

Diddy on 'Downton Abbey'? PBS says no

Don't believe the tweets: Sean "Diddy" Combs will not be appearing in British period TV drama "Downtown Abbey," PBS said on Wednesday. Booooo!

National

Parking meter 'Robin Hoods' provoke New Hampshire city's…

A group of friends shadow the city's parking enforcement officers, stuff coins in expired meters before they can issue tickets.

Entertainment

Angelina Jolie mastectomy changes her from gossip fodder…

Angelina Jolie's transformation into the poster girl for the fight against breast cancer has elevated her to heroine status in the media.

Entertainment

It's official: Yoko didn't break up The Beatles

Fans have blamed Yoko Ono for breaking up The Beatles since before they even broke up. But Paul McCartney has definitively said she had nada to do with it.

Entertainment

[Thursty] Send yourself on a tropical booze staycation…

If there's one spirit that most of us associate with the warmer seasons, it's rum. That's because most of it is produced in the tropical island climates we spend all…

Entertainment

PHOTOS: The Word, May 15

The gowns at the opening ceremony and premiere of 'The Great Gatsby' during the 66th Annual Cannes Film Festival.

MLB

Red Sox bats come alive in 9-2 win…

Red Sox recorded six extra-base hits in their win

MLB

Red Sox: Ortiz, Napoli at forefront of recent…

Red Sox: David Ortiz, Mike Napoli at forefront of offensive woes

NHL

Bruins, Rangers both hoping fallen stars rise in…

Bruins, Rangers both hoping fallen stars rise in NHL semi-finals

NFL

Hadfield: Bruins comeback the second best in Boston…

Hadfield: Bruins comeback the second best in Boston sports history

Style

Peter Som makes Anthropologie even prettier

Peter Som debuts a line of pretty dresses for Anthropologie as part of their Made in Kind designer series.

Lifestyle

Dating: 5 things you should NOT do on…

5 things you should never do on a first date.

Wellbeing

VIDEO: Two men take on the labor pain…

A machine with electrodes on it delivers mild shocks to the abdomen simulate the feeling of going into labor, intensifying in duration and timing as the process progresses.

Style

3 graphic tees that go with any outfit

3 graphic tees to spruce up a blah wardrobe day.