George Andrew Romero (born February 4, 1940) is an
American film director,
screenwriter,
editor and occasional
actor, best known for his gruesome and satirical
horror films about a hypothetical
zombie apocalypse. He is nicknamed Grandfather/KING of the Zombie.
[Starz Celebrating Zombiemania]
Life and career
Romero was born in
New York City to a
Cuban-American father and a
Lithuanian-American mother.
[The GENRE ONLINE.NET Interview - Writer and Director George A. Romero][Movies.about.com article] His father worked as a
commercial artist.
[George A. Romero Biography (1940–) ] Romero attended
Pittsburgh's
Carnegie Mellon University. After graduating in 1960,
[George.html George Romero] he began his career shooting short films and commercials. One of his early commercial films, a segment for
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood in which Mr. Rogers underwent a tonsillectomy,
[Mr. Rogers underwent a tonsillectomy] inspired Romero to go into the horror film business.
[Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream (2005)] He and friends formed Image Ten Productions in the late 1960s, and they chipped in roughly $10,000 apiece to produce what became one of the most celebrated horror films of all time:
Night of the Living Dead (1968). The movie, directed by Romero and co-written with
John A. Russo, became a
cult classic and a defining moment for modern horror cinema.
The films which followed were less popular:
There's Always Vanilla (1971),
Jack's Wife / Season of the Witch (1972) and
The Crazies (1973). Though not as well received as
Night of the Living Dead or some of his later work, these films have his signature social commentary while dealing with primarily horror-related issues at the microscopic level.
The Crazies, dealing with a biospill that induces an epidemic of homicidal madness, and the critically acclaimed arthouse success
Martin (1977), a film that strikingly deconstructs the
vampire myth, were the two standout efforts during this period. Like almost all of his films, they were shot in or around Romero's favorite city of
Pittsburgh.
In 1978, Romero returned to the
zombie genre with
Dawn of the Dead (1978). Shot on a budget of just $500,000 (the producers gave a false figure of $1.5 million to help their negotiating position with distributors), the film earned over $55 million worldwide and was named one of the top
cult films by
Entertainment Weekly in 2003. Romero made a third entry in his "Dead Series" with
Day of the Dead (1985), which was less popular at the box office, but has since gone on to gain a cult following thanks to VHS and DVD releases.
Between these two films Romero shot
Knightriders (1981), another festival favorite about a group of modern-day jousters who reenact tournaments on motorcycles, and the successful
Creepshow (1982), written by
Stephen King, an anthology of tongue-in-cheek tales modeled after 1950s horror comics.
From the latter half of the 1980s and into 1990s came
Monkey Shines (1988), about a killer helper monkey,
Two Evil Eyes (1990), an
Edgar Allan Poe adaptation in collaboration with
Dario Argento, the
Stephen King adaptation
The Dark Half (1993) and
Bruiser (2000), about a man whose face becomes a blank mask.
Romero updated his original screenplay and executive produced the remake of
Night of the Living Dead directed by
Tom Savini for Columbia / Tristar in 1990. Romero had a cameo appearance in
Jonathan Demme's Academy Award-winning
The Silence of the Lambs in 1991 as one of Hannibal Lecter's jailers.
In 1998 he directed the live action commercial (promoting the videogame
Resident Evil 2) in
Tokyo,
Japan. The 30-second advertisement was live action and featured the game's two main characters,
Leon S. Kennedy and
Claire Redfield, fighting a horde of zombies while in
Raccoon City's Police Station. The project was obvious territory for Romero; the
Resident Evil series has been heavily influenced by Romero's "Dead" projects. The commercial was rather popular and was released in the weeks before the game's actual release, although a contract dispute prevented the commercial from being shown outside Japan. Capcom was so impressed with Romero's work, it was strongly indicated that Romero would direct the first
Resident Evil film. He declined at first, "I don't wanna make another film with zombies in it, and I couldn't make a movie based on something that ain't mine", although in later years he reconsidered and wrote a script for the first movie. But it was eventually rejected in favor of
Paul W. S. Anderson's version.
Universal Studios produced and released a remake of
Dawn of the Dead in 2004, with which Romero was not involved. Later that year, Romero kicked off the
DC Comics title
Toe Tags with a six-issue miniseries titled
The Death of Death. Based on an unused script that Romero had previously written as a sequel to his 'Dead Trilogy', the comic miniseries concerns Damien, an intelligent zombie who remembers his former life, struggling to find his identity as he battles armies of both the living and the dead. Typical of a Romero zombie tale, the miniseries includes ample supply of both gore and social commentary (dealing particularly here with corporate greed and terrorism - ideas he would also explore in his next film in the series,
Land of the Dead). Romero has stated that the miniseries is set in the same kind of world as his 'Dead' films, but featured other locales besides Pittsburgh, where the majority of his films take place.
[| newsarama.com/forums/showthread.php]
Romero, who lives in
Toronto,
Ontario[Romero interview at The A.V. Club] and has applied for
permanent residency there,
["Director Romero longs to call Toronto home", The Toronto Star, [[February 13], 2008]] filmed a fourth "Dead" movie in that city titled
Land of the Dead. The movie's working title was "Dead Reckoning".
[Release data and AKA information at IMDB] Its $16 million production budget was the highest of the four movies in the series.
[George A. Romero Interview] Actors
Simon Baker,
Dennis Hopper,
Asia Argento, and
John Leguizamo star in the film. It was released on
June 24,
2005 to generally positive reviews.
Some critics have seen social commentary in much of Romero's work. They view
Night of the Living Dead as a film made in reaction to the turbulent 1960s,
Dawn of the Dead as a satire on
consumerism,
Day of the Dead as a study of the conflict between science and the military, and
Land of the Dead as an examination of
class conflict.
Romero collaborated with the game company
Hip Interactive in creating a game called
City of the Dead, but the game was canceled midway due to the financial problems of the company.
In June 2006, Romero began his next project, called Zombisodes. Broadcast on the web, they are a combination of a series of "Making of" shorts and story expansion detailing the work behind the film
George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead. Shooting began in Toronto in July 2006.
[George A. Romero's Next Project]
In August 2006, The Hollywood Reporter made two announcements about Romero, the first being that he will write and direct a film based on a short story by
Koji Suzuki, author of
Ring and
Dark Water, called
Solitary Isle[aintitcool.com] and the second announcement pertaining to his signing on to write and direct
George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead, which follows a group of college students making a horror movie in the woods, who stumble on a real zombie uprising. When the onslaught begins, they seize the moment as any good film students would, capturing the undead in a
cinema verite style that causes more than the usual production headaches.
[cinescape][aintitcool.com] The film was independently financed, making it the first indie zombie film Romero has done in years.
After a limited theatrical release,
Diary of the Dead was released on DVD by Dimension Extreme on May 20, 2008.
Shooting began in Toronto in September 2008 for Romero's newest zombie film. The working shooting title is currently
Survival of the Dead and the production company is called Blank Of the Dead. Originally, the film was reported to be a direct sequel to
Diary of the Dead, but recent reports have stated that this film will feature a new cast of characters, and most likely not retain the first-person camerawork of
Diary of the Dead. Filming has commenced on the movie, with Alan Van Sprang starring who featured in Romero's
Land of the Dead and
Diary of the Dead, and the majority of the story taking place on an island. The film premiered at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival.
Romero is currently writing two original Dead novels for Grand Central publishing, the first of which has a projected release date of summer 2010, the second will follow sometime after.
Romero is currently separated from his wife, Christine Forrest, whom he met on the set of
Season of the Witch; they had two children together.
Influences
Romero ranked his top ten films of all time for the 2002 Sight & Sound Greatest Films Poll (2002). They are
The Brothers Karamazov,
Casablanca,
Dr. Strangelove,
High Noon,
King Solomon's Mines (1950),
North by Northwest,
The Quiet Man,
Repulsion,
Touch of Evil and
The Tales of Hoffman. Romero listed the films in alphabetical order, with special placement given to
The Tales of Hoffman, which he cites as "my favourite film of all time; the movie that made me want to make movies."
[BFI - Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002]
Filmography
Awards and nominations
On October 27, 2009, Romero was honored with the Mastermind Award at Spike TV's
Scream 2009. The tribute was presented by longtime Romero fan
Quentin Tarantino, who stated in his speech that the "A" in George A. Romero stood for "A fucking genius."
Personal life
Romero is married with Christine Forrest since 1981 and had one son who is film director Cameron
[STAUNTON HILL (DVD Review)].
Books
- Dawn of the Dead (with Susan Sparrow; movie tie-in), 1979
- Bizarro! by Tom Savini (foreword), 1984
- Martin (with Susan Sparrow; movie tie-in), 1984
- Book of the Dead edited by John Skipp and Craig Spector (foreword), 1989
- Toe Tags #1-6 ("The Death of Death"; DC Comics), 2004–2005
Critical studies
- Gagne, Paul R. The Zombies That Ate Pittsburgh: the Films of George A. Romero (New York: Dodd, Mead 1987)
- Newman, Kim. Nightmare Movies: A Critical History of the Horror Film 1968–1988 (1988)
- Williams, Tony. Knight of the Living Dead: The Cinema of George A. Romero (London: Wallflower Press 2003)