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I'm board with all the movies I've seen such as Shawn of the Dead, 28 Days Later (not quite zombie but similar) and so forth and Resident Evil Apocolypse, got any other good terrorfying as heck movies?

2007-08-03 18:53:20 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Movies

11 answers

Dawn of the Dead

2007-08-03 18:56:17 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I tell you one that I recently watched for the first time that was Dawn of the Dead (the remake) with Ving Rhames and Jake Weber. It also has Kevin Zeger in it. I am not a big zombie movie fan, but I was surprised at how good this was. I have ended up watching four times on Starz and Encore over the past two months. It has a little bit better plot line and also more realistic than previous movies in the genre.

2007-08-03 20:10:14 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Land of the Dead by George A. Romero that was out a few years ago was pretty good. Besides the ones you already mentioned thats about all the good zombie movies that have been out. Now a few months ago a couple new "Night of the Living Dead" movies came out and went staright to DVD, but I can't imagine that they were any good! I think one of them was already on the Sci-Fi channel.

2007-08-03 20:28:09 · answer #3 · answered by G Money 6 · 0 0

Never actually seen a true zombie movie, unless those Resident Evil movies count.

2016-04-01 17:31:15 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead

2007-08-03 18:58:05 · answer #5 · answered by Jack B 2 · 1 0

The first time I saw Night Of The Living Dead (b&w), I was home alone, in the dark, and it scared the crap out of me.
But now it seems pretty tame.

2007-08-03 18:57:47 · answer #6 · answered by Kim P 2 · 1 0

...so, you're tired of the regular, generic and run-of-the-mill zombie grind, which Hollywood seems to stamping out, with absolute assembly-line, cookie-cutter precision???

Give THESE very underappreciated, unconventional and independent productions a try; they have garnished most a respectable reputation...and an ever-growing cult following, especially from those seeking other than the basic, high-polish tinsel-town dreck...

"Shatter Dead" (1994)

Director Scooter McCrae turns the zombie genre on its head in this groundbreaking (and oh-so wholly grim) horror film. The Angel of Death has descended to Earth, and upon impregnating a mortal woman the dead cease to die. Tormented at being stuck in a twilight zone between life and death, the undead attempt to return to their normal lives and reconnect with the ones they loved while living. As the clash between the terrified living and the mournful dead elevates into an all out war, a mortal woman named Susan (Stark Raven) attempts to reconnect with her undead boyfriend and find some sanity in a world that is falling apart.

"The Dead Next Door" (1988)

The feature debut of ultra-low-budget horror auteur J.R. Bookwalter, this fast-paced zombie mini-epic is very likely the most expensive movie ever shot on Super-8 film. Playing with the long-established mythos of George A. Romero's Living Dead trilogy, The Dead Next Door was produced with the help of many of the "Evil Dead" crew: financial backer Sam Raimi is credited as "Master Cylinder" and one of the characters is named after him; Evil Dead co-writer Scott Spiegel plays a role; and some character voices are dubbed by Bruce Campbell. The story centers on the members of the "Zombie Squad" -- an assault team trained in the hunting and extermination of the living dead -- and their mission to track down the scientists who developed a zombie-making virus and find the rumored antidote. Of the many lethal obstacles in their path, the deadliest comes in the form of a religious cult whose leader sees the zombie epidemic as a precursor of Armageddon -- and is hell-bent on expediting it. Very stylish for what is essentially an epic-scale home movie (and gushing with plentiful home-style gore effects), this remains Bookwalter's best effort and contains numerous witty homages to the Romero films which inspired it.

"Meat Market" (2000)

When two former employees of a company, which conducts bizarre medical experiments, put two and two together, they realize that a series of "animal attacks" reported by the media are actually the work of flesh-eating zombies created by the company. As the city becomes engulfed by the walking dead, the two truth-seekers team up with three lesbian vampire women, a crazed & washed-up Mexican wrestler, a wounded soldier, and a mysterious scientist in order to fight for their lives. This low-budget horror/gore/comedy has garnered an underground following for its relentless energy and stomach-churning special effects.

"Bone Sickness" (2004)

Alex (Rich George) is suffering from a mysterious and incurable disease that is turning him into a worm infested ghoul. His wife, Kristen (Darya Zabinski), solicits the help of Alexs friend Thomas (Brian Paulin) to help find a cure. Thomas works in a morgue and decides to utilize the bones of the dead as an alternative medicine. The unusual medicine works and Alex begins to make a recovery. The dead, however, dont like having their bones abused and they rise from their graves to reclaim their missing parts and exact revenge upon the living.

2007-08-03 22:07:06 · answer #7 · answered by Fright Film Fan 7 · 0 0

"Fahrenheit 9-11."

2007-08-03 19:02:28 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

check out any movie that is produced by "FULL MOON PRODUCTIONS" you cant go wrong

2007-08-03 18:57:26 · answer #9 · answered by JOSEPH J 2 · 0 0

"The Blood Sucking Zombies That Ate Mississauga"

and

"Bartender.... Another Zombie, Please"

2007-08-03 18:57:59 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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