Greatest Zombie movie of all time?!


Question: Greatest Zombie movie of all time!?
If you go with the origional night of the living dead you WILL NOT GET BEST ANSWER!.Www@Enter-QA@Com


Answers:
Dawn of the DeadWww@Enter-QA@Com

THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (1985)!.

This is the only zombie movie I actually ever enjoyed!. One of the most blackest humor I've ever seen on film!. Will make you laugh out loud at things you shouldn't laugh at!.

The split live dogs came back to life, and the zombie with its exposed backbone wiggling back and forth saying that death is extremely painful and only eating live brains kills the pain!.

One of the best gross-out movies ever made!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

Romero's Zombies are always the classic best though the remake of dawn takes it up a notch with the quicker reflexes!.

Shaun of the Dead was good, but I do not think the 'best' in terms of zombification!. I can't wait for World War Z as a movie!.!.!. but as for movies already made!.!.!.

I dunno!.!.!. I watch too many b movies that turn out good or a movies that turn out worse!.!.!.


I don't like 28 days later or 28 weeks later cause they're not really zombies!.!.!.!. they're wanna be, like the zombies in RE 4!.!.!.


Anyhoo!.!. to actually answer the question - the new rendition of Day of the Dead is definitly worth watching!.!.!.!.

(perhaps not the best but!.!. hell!.!.!. it's like trying to vote for the best shade or tint of green)Www@Enter-QA@Com

Shaun of The Dead!.
Its utterly hilariousWww@Enter-QA@Com

the hills have eyes 1, and 2!. orr 28 week later, they'e both good but the hills have eyes 1 &2 are wayy scarier!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

Cemetery Man (italian title Dellamorte, Dellamore), awesome and funny!Www@Enter-QA@Com

28 Weeks Later

Planet TerrorWww@Enter-QA@Com

Resident Evil, the FIRST one!!! Oh yeah!Www@Enter-QA@Com

I am Legend, or 28 DaysWww@Enter-QA@Com

Shaun of the dead!.

Hands down the best zombie movie!. It is such a parody, and utterly hillarious!. But there are points in the movie that are exceptionally scary, and others that are poignant!.

Cinematically there are several really nice done sequences!. And I love the scene where they infiltrate other zombies by the shuffle steps to get to the pub!.

Goatdog's movies says these are his top 10
10!. Wild Zero (2000-Japan)!. This is the most fun you’ll ever have at a gender-bending rock ‘n’ roll zombie movie!. This movie is no less than a story of the power of love and music to defeat the forces of evil, which in this case are represented by alien zombies, the recording industry, and close-mindedness in general!. It's inspiring, lots of fun, and full of good low-budget gore!. It also features Guitar Wolf, a Japanese punk band that is the distillation of the essence of cool!. Aoo!

9!. Versus (2000-Japan)!. Part zombie movie, part kung fu flick, part Tarantino-esque crime fest, and nearly incomprehensible, this movie is powered on its enthusiasm and merry blending of genres!. The plot is a fascinating blend of mindless nonsense and overloaded story!. It has one of the best settings in zombie movie history: the forest of resurrection, where unwitting gangsters have buried their dead for years (complete with loaded weapons)!. There's little space for thinking about how ridiculous it all is: you're just dragged along helplessly, laughing at the audacity of it!.

8!. Shaun of the Dead (2004-UK)!. If zombies stalked the earth, would we be able to distinguish them from the wage slaves and cubicle dwellers that we see every day (or perhaps that we are)!? That's the conceit to this hysterical film: for almost the first half, our hero doesn't notice that the slack-jawed Londoners around him are actually the living dead!. It slips a little when the zombies overrun the city, becoming more typical, but that first hour and a good ending earn it a place on my list!.

7!. Zombi 2 (1979-Italy)!. As far as straightforward post-Romero zombie films go, this is the best of the lot!. It lacks the humor of the best of the American and Asian zombie films; instead, it’s tense and gory—an old-school horror film without the postmodern twists!. Plus, it features a fight between a zombie and a shark, and you can never go wrong with something like that!. It is supposed to be a "sequel" to Romero's Dawn of the Dead, which was released in Italy as simply "Zombi!."

6!. 28 Days Later (2003-UK)!. This is one of the best horror films to come out in recent years, and it breathes fresh new life into the zombie genre!. Instead of the shambling dead, the enemy here is super-charged infected people whose rage is so great that they cease being human!. The film takes place at what seems like the collapse of civilization, and the characters venture forth to see what remains of it!. While this is a zombie movie more in form than in specifics (the zombies aren't actually dead yet, for example), it's one of the best examples of how the idea of zombies symbolize a host of things!. It also contains some really wonderful homages to horror films of the past, especially Romero's famous trilogy!.

5!. White Zombie (1932)!. This is what started it all, the first zombie film!. Instead of the flesh eating that characterizes post-Romero zombie films, this one relies on atmosphere and expressionistic sets and acting to convey a pretty potent sense of dread!. This is a good reminder that blood and guts are not necessary to make a good horror film!. Bela Lugosi was never better than he was as Murder Legendre, who can turn people into zombies with the power of his mind (and his cool eyebrows)!.

4!. Army of Darkness (1993)!. Heroic and ridiculous: that describes this, the capstone of Sam Raimi's films about the adventures of Ash (Bruce Campbell), and it also describes Ash himself!. The film is an epic tale of swords, sorcery, undead armies, and true love, but it is also a slapstick classic, featuring more of Campbell's self-destructive antics and wonderfully lame posturing!. He's sort of an antihero, in that he's heroic, but mostly despite his best efforts!.

3!. Night of the Living Dead (1968)!. This is the birth of the modern zombie film!. It is also one of the scariest horror films ever made!. It's pretty simple, really: the lurching dead want to devour the living, and it seems like they're destined to win!. This film defined the genre forever, made George Romero's career, and also rocketed Roger Ebert to national stardom (he wrote an angry column about children left by their parents at theaters showing this film, and when it was reprinted by Reader's Digest, it made him a household name)!.

2!. Dawn of the Dead (1978)!. I think this film is superior to its predecessor in almost every way!. The inevitability of the lurching undead is jacked up a notch because we know that the seeming victory at the end of the earlier film was a lie!. The claustrophobia is improbably more evident; there's something about that abandoned mall that screams isolation!. And the social commentary is on full display!. This is one of the great social critiques of the 1970s!.

1!. Cemetery Man (Dellamorte Dellamore) (1994-Italy)!. In addition to being the best of the slapstick zombie films, this film is a brilliant satire on 1990s generation-X ennui, a heart-wrenching story of the vagaries of love, and even a postmodern take on the power of language!. There’s so much going on in this film, but it’s difficult to convince anyone that it is worth seeing because they don’t want to look past the surface, which is coated with blood and zombie brains!. This might be one of the best horror films ever made!.

On the best stuff in the world!.com
Shaun of the Dead comes in first

Source(s):
http://goatdog!.com/articlePage!.php!?artic!.!.!.
http://www!.thebeststuffintheworld!.com/ca!.!.!.Www@Enter-QA@Com



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