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-   -   Night of the Living Dead (https://www.horror.com/forum/showthread.php?t=49888)

crabapple 02-08-2009 06:44 PM

Night of the Living Dead
 
Still a favorite that I watch every year at least once, this movie continues to scare me and I have seen it many times. I even like the colorized versions, and the recent DVDs containing the neat special features...this movie is one of the perfect Halloween viewing experiences, and should be given extra praise because it has held up so well over the years.

You folks have any memories from the first time you saw this? I remember I closed my eyes when the ghoul was chasing Barbra in the beginning...it was the first time I noticed I was closing my eyes during a film, and I respected the film from that moment, it was so energetic and so effective as a dramatic narrative.

fortunato 02-08-2009 06:51 PM

Oh, yes. As with most horror fans, this is one of the first horror films I remember loving.

I saw NOTLD for the first time when I was probably about 6; a poor-quality, scratchy VHS copy on a tiny television. I'll never forget being completely wide-eyed and totally engaged for the whole thing.

I recently got to see this on the big screen at another film festival close to me. It was in a super-old theatre, and there were only like 30 or 40 people there. It was amazing, obviously.

phantomstranger 02-08-2009 07:45 PM

I remember seeing this film on late night TV back in the '70's and it scared the crap out of me, It's still one of the greats

neverending 02-08-2009 07:54 PM

First time I saw it was at a midnight showing in the 70s, and it was just mind-blowing. The whole cheapness of it makes it seem so real and Barbara and her brother are just so off the wall creepy...

They're coming to get you, Barbara.....
Johnny!

ManchestrMorgue 02-09-2009 03:49 AM

Actually the first time I saw this film, I wasn't overly impressed.:eek:

Don't get me wrong, I liked the film, but I was quite young and I think it was quite different to the horror films I was used to seeing.

However, I revisited it some years later and got an awful lot more out of it. These days, it's one of my favourite zombie films.

The_Return 02-09-2009 06:04 PM

I credit this - along with the original House on Haunted Hill - with being a major part of my early obsession with horror.

After one of my first major plays, my parents - instead of getting me flowers - got me a cheap DVD triple-feature of public domain movies: this one, along with Nosferatu and HoHH. It took me quite awhile to appreciate Nosferatu (I was probably 11 at the time), but the other two quickly became favourites.

I remember watching it for the first time at my grandmother's house (which, by the way, is haunted) on a tiny little portable DVD player. I was utterly spellbound...one of my favourites to this day, and I think it always will be.

Wuqaz 02-12-2009 05:17 PM

The first time I saw NOTLD I was maybe seven, and I watched it on a rainy Halloween with my sister. Instead of getting candy we stayed in and watched that movie. I remember being terrified of looking outside for fear of seeing Zombies outside.

Watching that one, and getting so scared by it, is what made me so in love with the Zombie genre.

newb 02-12-2009 07:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by neverending (Post 787576)
First time I saw it was at a midnight showing in the 70s, and it was just mind-blowing. The whole cheapness of it makes it seem so real and Barbara and her brother are just so off the wall creepy...

They're coming to get you, Barbara.....
Johnny!

pretty sure my first viewing was about the same.


lots of beer was involved though....so its a bit foggy.

Doc Faustus 02-13-2009 09:13 AM

It took me a couple viewings to really get into this, but that's because the first time I saw it I was twelve and the second time I saw it I was pretty tired. But the third time, I saw how stark and terrifying it really was and how innovative.

milktoaste 02-13-2009 10:07 AM

I must've watched this movie 25 times, I lived in an apartment with no cable and was too lazy to unpack my movies. The more I watched the more I got out of it, my emotional responces to the characters changed. In my personal opinion NOTLD will always be a timeless classic, I could watch it again today and love it just as much.


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