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LIST PRICE $14.98 Save 87%
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Format: DVD Mar 2004 Not Rated Recording Mode: (unknown) 127 min. Color Extra Info: Theatrical Version UPC: 013131216394 |
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In general items shipped via Media Mail should arrive in 2-9 days (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) from the time of shipping * ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Details

Movie Description Picking up where NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD left off, and still offering no explanation of why the dead are walking the earth, DAWN OF THE DEAD plunges headlong into one of the most violent and original horror films ever made. After securing an apartment building overcome with flesh-eating zombies, two Philadelphia area SWAT team members, Peter (Ken Foree) and Roger (Scott Reiniger), flee to a television station, where they escape in the station's helicopter with Francine (Gaylen Ross) and Stephen (David Emge), two station employees. Seeking refuge from the zombies and the ensuing hysteria, they land on top of a Pittsburgh area shopping mall, despite the fact that the undead seem to be flocking there. What begins as a stop for supplies becomes a longer stay as the four become embroiled in a futile war within the mall to keep their flesh to themselves and remain alive.
The film's relentlessly disturbing and innovative gore effects are one reason to see DAWN OF THE DEAD, but those who can stomach the endless barrage of blood and gnarled zombie faces will be rewarded--and possibly surprised--by what the film says about human nature and life within a consumer-based culture. Any aficionado of horror is likely to place the film high on their list of revered cinema.
Synopsis Director George Romero's tongue-in-cheek sequel to NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD is so grotesque that it achieves a kind of comic bliss. In the modern cathedral of materialism, a shopping mall, flesh-eating zombies browse for more victims. Four horrified survivors fend off the gruesome shoppers as the mall fills with the once-living.
Film Notes DVD Features:
Notes: 1. This program has been mastered using DiViMax, a high definition film transfer process. Region [unknown] Keep Case Widescreen Audio: DTS 5.1 Surround Sound - English Dolby EX Sound - English Additional Release Material: Commentary
Theatrical release: April 10, 1979 (USA).
DAWN OF THE DEAD went into production in November 1977, with a budget of $1.5 million.
The mall sequences were filmed at the Monroeville Mall in Monroeville, PA. The tenement scenes were shot in Pittsburgh's Hill District, the area upon which the TV series HILL STREET BLUES was based.
Several versions of the film exist, as a result of the censorship policies of different countries.
The editing of the 121-minute Italian version was supervised by co-producer Dario Argento.
Director George Romero makes a cameo appearance in the television station at the beginning of the film. Gore maestro Tom Savini appears as the leader of a biker gang who is eviscerated by zombies in the shopping mall.
Most of the 143 storeowners in the mall allowed their stores to be photographed in the film.
Industry Reviews "...DAWN pummels the viewer with a series of ever-more-grisly events....Romero's strong suit is pacing and technical fluidity. His film has a keen visual sense that tersely extracts the maximum from all the bloodletting..." Variety - Sege. (04/18/1979)
"Fundamentally satirical, DAWN also has an essential -- but rarely remarked upon -- sadness." Entertainment Weekly - Chris Willman (03/19/2004)
"Romero himself is said to prefer this tauter version, which balances its low-budget gore with a sharp satire on consumer society..." Sight and Sound - James Bell (12/01/2004)
"[S]till highly effective, and as slyly funny as gory." Uncut - Peter Hogan (12/01/2004)
Quotations "Some kind of instinct. Memory of what used to be. This was an important place in their lives."--Steve Andrews (David Emge) on why the zombies are flocking to the mall
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Other Editions
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Laserdisc - Not in stock. Add to Wish List VHS, Apr 1998 - $0.75 Save 94% VHS, Apr 1998 - $1.50 Save 84% VHS, Apr 1999 - $0.75 Save 94% VHS - $0.98 Save 93% DVD, Oct 1997 - $19.87 Save 20% DVD, Apr 1999 - $8.00 Save 67% Laserdisc - $15.00 Save 62% VHS - $0.75 Save 94% VHS, Jan 2000 - $0.94 Save 90% VHS, Apr 1999 - $1.00 Save 93% VHS - $0.75 Save 96% Laserdisc - $21.99 Save 55% DVD, Sep 2004 - $15.00 Save 69% DVD, Oct 2005 - $2.99 Save 85% UMD, Nov 2005 - $8.00 Save 59% Blu-ray Disc, Oct 2007 - $12.25 Save 59% DVD - $23.47
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