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George Romero's Diary of the Dead
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Movie Review
George Romero's Diary of the Dead (R)
Nicholas White
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Hollywood.com Says
Diary of the Dead
is a midnight zombie flick shot through a
Cloverfield
and
Blair Witch Project
kaleidoscope, an ultimate indictment of modern, personality-driven media--and its meaninglessness dumped on consumers every single day.
Story
Diary of the Dead
is shot through a handheld digital camera, as though it is a private home movie. A Winnebago (that great comic device) full of film students heads into the midnight woods of Pennsylvania. The camera introduces us to the film students, who, un-ironically, talk as though they have never seen
Return of the Living Dead
or
Dawn of the Dead
or any of the hundreds of zombie movies out there. They have no budget, but they have heard that the dead have come back to life and are trying to get "home" to find their families. But, no one is alive, and they unfortunately have to kill their families (again). Scampering around the Keystone State putting bullets in zombies' heads, and exploding one's eyeballs with electric shockers, the kids take refuge in a fortified mansion's panic room. All rules have collapsed, including the federal government and National Guard, which has taken up machine guns and is stealing food from civilians.
Acting
Casting is not the movie's strong point. Of course, it's on par with what is expected--disposable characters with no depth behind their motivations, other than good looks and charisma, including
Michelle Morgan
and
Shawn Roberts
. None of the actors are particularly memorable but are moderately talented in accomplishing what director
George Romero
tells them to do. One wonders why they aren't more self-conscious about giving soliloquy speeches to a camera with all their friends in the room? Oh well.
Direction
To see
Romero
at work is to witness one of the more practiced filmmakers around. His perspective is creative, and he gets the audience to pay attention. From his 1968's seminal
Night of the Living Dead
, to his last effort, 2005's
Land of the Dead
,
Romero
has committed his life to telling stories about walking dead people, using zombies as a metaphorical tool for the rest of us.
Romero
's execution is sharp and fluid--and most importantly, scary. The first body-munching scenes are as gruesome as they can be. The weakness?
Romero
's heavy-handed, disingenuous ideas about media and technology. They are frankly a little old-codger, belonging to someone who fears the benefits of technological breakthroughs.
Romero
seems to think keeping video diaries can be zombie-like. Curious, considering how
Romero
has made a distinguished career out of base elements of mass media.
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