
Now that zombies have taken over the world, the living have built a walled-in city to keep the dead out. But all's not well where it's most safe, as a revolution plans to overthrow the city leadership, and the zombies are turning into more advanced creatures.... (Full plot summary below)
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Now that zombies have taken over the world, the living have built a walled-in city to keep the dead out. But all's not well where it's most safe, as a revolution plans to overthrow the city leadership, and the zombies are turning into more advanced creatures.
Leave your thoughts about Land of the Dead.
| The New York TimesManohla DargisOne of the enormous pleasures of genre filmmaking is watching great directors push against form and predictability, as Mr. Romero does brilliantly in Land of the Dead. One thing is for sure: You won't go home hungry. |
| The Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenThe latest installment could well be Romero's masterpiece. Taking full advantage of state-of-the-art makeup and visual effects, he has a more vivid canvas at his disposal, not to mention two decades worth of pent-up observations about American society. |
| Chicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonRomero's newest is a horror movie for hard-core fans of the gory and the gruesome and a classic genre film for genre aficionados. |
| Milwaukee Journal SentinelJackie LoohauisRomero was savvy enough to turn a $100,000 indie quickie into a classic and he shows he can still make a corpse stagger with his new film, George A. Romero's Land of the Dead. |
| PremiereAaron HillisLand of the Dead is Romero's long-awaited masterpiece, a slyly suspenseful and droll thrill-ride that expounds on both the highbrow and the chewed-off-brow concepts of his previous trilogy, then flippantly dismisses the cheap scare tactics of the control-pad generation's gimmicky genre knockoffs. |
| eFilmCritic.comRob GonsalvesWith a master's control, Romero sets his characters in motion and against each other. |
| Bangor Daily News (Maine)Christopher SmithThe movie deepens the director's vision and moves the story forward with ease, giving new purpose to the zombies Romero conceived in 1968's "Night of the Living Dead." |
| Jam! MoviesLouis B. HobsonLand of the Dead is a banquet of nasty thrills for those who like their horror dashed with allegory and satire, as well as blood, guts and gore. |
| eFilmCritic.comErik ChildressRomero's satiric cultural slant has never been as finely tuned and elevates just another chapter into something deeper and scarier. |
| Now Playing MagazineBrent SimonRomero's script isn't a thing of grace and beauty, but it achieves a sort of brawny entertainment that works in the moment. |