Showing posts with label Night of the Living Dead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Night of the Living Dead. Show all posts

Monday, July 17, 2017

George A Romero: My Tribute




I can say, without the slightest shred of hyperbole, that I would not be the man I am today had it not been for George Romero.  It would be the farthest thing possible from an exaggeration to say that, despite the fact that I never met the man, or was ever even in the same room as him, his impact on my life is equal to, if not greater than, anyone who has ever walked the planet.  The death of an artist can be a very bizarre and complex phenomenon.  Those who mourn are often looked upon with scorn for placing so much emphasis on the passing of a public figure that, in the strictest terms, wasn’t a physical part of their world.  But for those whose lives were deeply touched by that person’s art, it can feel like the loss of a family member.  A beloved friend.  A mentor.  A hero.  Even a sort of spiritual figure.  That is the power that lies in the essence of art.  Art changes lives.  And I can honestly say that I have never felt an artist’s passing as intensely as I feel this one because George Romero’s art, in a very real and literal sense, profoundly altered the course of my life.  There would never have been a Son of Celluloid without him.  More importantly however, had it not been for one fateful viewing of Night of the Living Dead, I’m not even sure who Nathan Hamilton would be today.



In 1992, I was a very mixed up kid.  As the son of a Southern Baptist minister and a member of a traveling evangelistic family unit as a child, I had been fully indoctrinated.  Some would call it brainwashing.  From birth I was being groomed to carry on the family business.  But there was a side of me that I didn’t understand.  I had always found myself attracted to the darkness.  While others were preaching about Jesus healing lepers, I was enamored with the seven headed apocalyptic beasts in Revelations.  While my father talked about the resurrection from the pulpit, I was rendering the best gory-as-hell depictions of crucifixions my five year old art skills would allow on the back of church bulletins.  More than one concerned Sunday School teacher called my folks in for a conference when, upon being tasked with drawing a picture from a bible story, I turned in an image of David holding Goliath’s dripping, severed head aloft.



I was just doing what came natural to me, but it was always treated as some sort of derangement that needed to be fixed.  I was sick.  These urges were of the devil.  Why are you like this?  Why can’t you be normal?  Do you think this glorifies the Lord?  What’s the matter with you?  When your entire world view is based on sin and salvation, if you are told enough times by those you believe to be spiritual leaders that there is something deeply wrong with you, you start to believe it yourself.  If an impressionable child is prayed over to “take this wickedness from him” enough times, it will inevitably get inside their head.  And this is where I found myself in early October of 1992; with a deep seeded inner turmoil.  I was torn between my honest proclivity towards the macabre and the fear that these urges very well may be the work of infernal powers after all.  I didn’t know what to think.



Then came a night that, 25 years later, I still remember as vividly as a snapshot.  On my little black and white TV in my room, I discovered that some now long defunct and forgotten UHF station was about to show a movie called Night of the Living Dead.  I had heard the name somewhere before, and I knew I had to see it.  That night, basking in the glorious monochrome glow, I saw my first horror movie.  I wasn’t afraid.  I was mesmerized.  As the movie progressed, I slowly came to the realization that if this kind of entertainment existed, then there were more people out there like me.  Lots more.  Enough that they made movies just for them.  I was reveling in the things that fed my soul, the very things I had been taught to hate and fear, and nothing bad was happening.  I felt no satanic command to kill people.  My soul wasn’t being dragged to the abyss.  In fact, I was the happiest I had ever been.  Watching that movie felt… it felt like home.



When it  ended, I laid down in bed and thought long and hard.  Everything I had ever been taught said that what I had just done was wrong.  But everything within me had never felt so right.  It was in that moment that I decided that I no longer wanted to be what I was being made into.  I wanted to be who I actually was.  As I drifted off to sleep, that inner turmoil was gone.  In its place, I felt truly at peace for the first time I could remember.  The person that I would eventually grow into was born in that moment.  That’s why I call myself the Son of Celluloid.  Because I feel like that singular movie experience gave birth to the real me.  And although I now know that it takes a small army to make a film happen, in my 12 year old mind that realization, that conversion, was thanks to one man; the director.  George A Romero.  I guess, in a way, you could call him the Father of Celluloid.



About a year later, the first horror movie I ever purchased was, of course, Night of the Living Dead.   That beat to hell VHS still sits in my collection as the cornerstone of the horror obsession at the core of my being.  I couldn’t begin to count how many times I’ve watched it.  For years, I watched it as I went to sleep nearly every night.  The first thing I’ve done on my last 20 or so Halloweens is put that movie on.  When I went to film school, about 75% of my projects and essays were about his body of work (the other quarter were about Argento).  I always hoped, one day, that I would get to meet the man who changed my life and thank him.  When I started getting involved with the Days of the Dead conventions, I always hoped he would be there one year.  Sadly, our paths never crossed.  He was supposed to be the keynote guest in Indianapolis a couple of weeks ago.  I had that old VHS tape ready for him to sign.  I was finally going to meet the man who had meant more to me than he possibly could have ever known.  Truth be told, I probably would have blathered like an idiot or just frozen in the face of a man who, in my mind, had been built up to damn near Godlike status.  It was not to be, however.  He cancelled due to health reasons.  I was crushed, but held the hope that he would be healthy again when the next con came around.  Sadly, there will never be a next time.



This may have all sounded very maudlin and melodramatic to some of you, but my words are the only tribute I have for a man who, in a way that cannot be overstated, set me free.  It’s strange knowing that I now live in a world where the godfather of independent horror no longer walks among us.  I’m sure he knew his stature in the horror world.  I’m sure he’s been told countless times by countless filmmakers that he was their inspiration.  I’m sure he knew that, by creating the modern zombie, he changed the landscape of the genre forever.  I’m sure untold numbers of fans have made him uncomfortable professing their admiration for him just like I probably would have.  But I wonder if he knew just how far his influence transcended horror entertainment and touched the very hearts, minds, and lives of his fans and, in cases like mine, was a guiding force in who they would come to be.  My fondest hope is that he somehow did.



So now here I sit, watching Night of the Living Dead for the only god knows how many hundredth time.  In the past, I have watched this movie and thrilled.  I have watched this movie and marveled.  I have watched this movie and laughed.  I have watched this movie and been comforted.  I have watched this movie and learned.  I have watched this movie and adored every second of entertainment it has given me.  But tonight, for the very first time, I watch this movie and weep.  Thank you, George.  Not just for what you did, but for what you meant.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

What Halloween Means To Me '13 Day 30: Russ Streiner and Judith O'Dea


Russ Streiner and Judith O’Dea are literally the first voices I hear every Halloween.  You see, Russ and Judith played Johnny and Barbara (as in “They’re coming to get you…”) in Night of the Living Dead.  Russ was also the producer of the film.  One of my longstanding All Hallows traditions is popping in NOTLD (sometimes a pristine DVD, sometimes my ancient, grainy VHS copy) as soon as I wake up on October 31st.  NOTLD happens to be my favorite movie of all time.  In addition to being an incredible flick, it’s the first horror film I ever watched.  I caught it on TV late one October night when I was 12, and it started me on the journey into the macabre that I’ve been on for the last two decades.  It was a profound experience.  At the risk of sounding melodramatic, I consider the first time I basked in the glow of monocrome flesh eaters my awakening; the moment when I discovered who I really was.  It was also the first horror movie I ever bought, starting my horror collection off right.  That’s why, on the final day of the 2013 What Halloween Means To Me countdown, it is my extreme honor to present to you two of the people responsible for, in my mind, the greatest horror film ever made, a film that changed my life, and a movie without which it just wouldn’t be Halloween.  So, Johnny and Barbara, I mean Russ and Judith, what does Halloween mean to you?



Note: Judith O’Dea will be appearing at the Walker StalkerCon in Atlanta on Nov. 1-3.  If you’re a zombie-phile, it is an event not to be missed!



    





 “When I think of Halloween, I think of Mary Poppins, my childhood, and that of my children Jenni and John. 

     Why Mary Poppins, that wonderfully supercalifragilisticexpialidocious nanny popularized in film by Walt Disney?  Well, when I was a kid, those magical books by P. L. Travers were my absolute favorites.  One of the stories took place in autumn right around ‘All Hallows Eve’ when the chill London breezes blew leaves off the trees that carried secret messages for the Banks children of Cherry Tree Lane.  Oh, how I loved that story and wished I could have been there to take part in all the magic.

     Another childhood memory was that Halloween signaled the beginning of the whole wonderful autumn and winter worlds of Thanksgiving and Christmas.  I could feel summer being pushed aside…could smell it in the air and feel it on my skin!  A perfect time of year!

     I can remember trick or treating using an old brown paper grocery bag.  Baby Ruth candy bars were one of my all-time favorites.  We kids never did anything mean or destructive.  The best we could muster was ringing a doorbell or two and running away like crazy not wanting to be caught. 

     My most memorable costume was as an old organ grinder with a blow-up rubber monkey sitting on top.  My dad made the portable organ grinder out of a cardboard box and an old sawed off broom stick.  I wore the whole contraption around my neck and could turn a wooden crank on the side of the box that I pretended could make music.  My blow-up monkey came from a trip to the circus that happened earlier that summer.  Boy, did I love that little guy!  I also loved wearing my dad’s old clothes and shoes along with one of his fedora felt hats and a glued-on mustache.  No other costume that I can remember ever compared to that one.

     Then, years later, when my own children were old enough to go trick or treating, I can remember making my son what I thought was the coolest costume ever.  We were living in Santa Monica, CA at the time.  I took a paper grocery bag; made a false bottom in it, filled the top half with a variety of empty food cans and boxes…cereal, macaroni, and veggies, then slipped it over his head.  He and my daughter Jenni went trick or treating that night and afterwards I took them to Norm’s Restaurant for a whopping 4-course dinner…salad, soup, entre, and dessert, all for less than $6.00! 

     We were a team back in those days…or so I thought.  Maybe, looking back on it now, it was all more in my head how cool those times were…how cool I thought the kids thought they were.

     It really doesn’t matter though.  The memories are some of the best in the world for me.  I’m sure my kids have their own versions.  But the fact is HALLOWEEN was one of our favorite holidays.  And is to this very day…especially for my daughter and her family who carry on tradition in their own unique ways.  How grateful and happy it all makes me feel.

Thanks for letting me share…"





“When Nathan and Son of Celluloid asked me that question- I must say that what immediately flashed into my mind were my three (now grown) children.  If I am disappointing any Son of Celluloid readers, I apologize- but please bear with me, I may have some juicy memories in a moment.

Although I have wonderful memories of my own Halloween’s from my growing up years and sharing Halloween with my cousins and friends, my most fond (and meaningful) memories come from doing Halloween with my own children.  When my kids were young, the whole concept of helping them pick out what they wanted to dress up as, then buying or helping to make their costumes, doing their make up and then taking them trick or treating hold the most fond memories for me.

Being the romantic person I am, I think Halloween has always signaled the start of the Fall and Winter holidays, and I have always liked the year-end holidays.

Both for me when I was a kid and later when my kids were dressing up there was always this sense of “hiding” in the costume and make up of another character and (almost) no one knew who you were at least for a few hours.  So dressing up in costume was like a walking around hiding place.

Some times my kids costumes were modest and other times they were very elaborate- but they were always fun and the close time spent with my kids are my most prized memories.

On the more juicy side- two Halloween happenings stick out.  The first happened just last October (2012).  John Russo and I were invited to be the co-Grand Marshalls of the 10,000 person Toronto Zombie Walk.  Looking out from the stage of Toronto’s Nathan Phillips Square at 10,000 people all gathered together “hiding” in full view in their zombie make was such a RUSH!  That was very memorable.

Another outstanding Halloween memory reaches back to Halloween Night - 1968.  Night Of The Living Dead™ had been release about 30 days earlier and George Romero and I decided we would go to a bar in the Shadyside area of Pittsburgh.  No, we were not in costume.  We had a few drinks and talked back and forth about whether our newly released movie was going to be accepted by the public.  Now, 45 years later, that question seems to have been answered.”



1 more day ‘til Halloween, Halloween, Halloween.  1 more day ‘til Halloween, Silver Shamrock!

Monday, February 6, 2012

Rest in Peace Bill Hinzman

The world of horror lost a beloved icon when Bill Hinzman lost his battle with cancer on Sunday. There are few faces more iconic in my mind than that of Zombie #1. Night of the Living Dead is my favorite film of all time and, with the possible exception of Rocky Horror Picture Show, the movie I have seen the most times in my life. I couldn't begin to count how many times I've watched him shuffle among the graves as Johnny intones "They're coming to get you Barbara." I also couldn't begin to count how many times I've thrown that flick in at the end of a long day and faded off to sleep watching him bash Johnny's head in and break that window. It's my go to cinematic comfort food, and he is definitely one of the main ingredients. His pale visage is imprinted on my mind the same way Misfits songs are. I know that might sound overly sentimental to some, but I don't care. He terrified audiences, and at one time he scared me too, but for years seeing him has actually warmed my heart, and I'm sad to see him go.
Hinzman holds a very special place in horror history. He was the first zombie seen in the film that redefined what a zombie was, making him the first modern zombie ever on celluloid. He worked with Romero again, appearing in The Crazies and Season of the Witch. Since then he's appeared in films such as Santa Claws and Shadow: Dead Riot. He also directed a couple of fright flicks; The Majorettes and, ironically, Flesheater. In recent years was a fixture on the convention circuit. I never had the pleasure of meeting the man, but I have never heard him described as anything but pleasant, friendly, fun, and genuine by those who have. Son of Celluloid would like to offer condolences to his family and friends, and thank him sincerely for his contributions to the horror genre.

Monday, October 31, 2011

The Horror Movie Darwin Awards#1: Tommy in Night of the Living Dead (remake)


Well folks, we’ve finally arrived at number one. The chart topping entry comes from my favorite horror remake of all time. It also happens to be a remake of my favorite film of all time. As a kid watching Night of the Living Dead ’90 on Monstervision, I experienced for the first time the “what the hell are you doing dumbass?” feeling we all know and love. That, along with the sheer inconceivability of anyone ever thinking this was a good idea, makes this one top the list.

This flick is chock full of dumbassery, but the crowning achievement belongs to Tommy. We all know the scenario. The zombie apocalypse has begun, and a ragtag group of survivors is holed up in a farmhouse. Ben, played by Candyman, has a truck but it’s low on gas. There is a pump out back, but it’s locked and there are a bunch of zombies in the way. Ben, Tommy, and Tommy’s girl Judy Rose decide to fight their way to the gas. By the way, did old farmhouses used to come equipped with gas pumps? Was that standard? That’s what I call convenience! Anyway, they get to the pump and discover that they have the wrong keys. At this point in the original NOTLD, Ben shot the lock off of the pump with what looked to be a .22 rifle. That was stupid. It turned out ok, and it is plausible that a really good marksman could do this with a weapon of that small a caliber without hitting the gas pump. Still a stupid idea though.

In the remake, Tommy tries the same thing; only he isn’t armed with a .22. He’s got a 12 gauge shotgun. A SHOTGUN! Have you ever seen someone smoking while pumping gas and thought “what a moron?” Maybe you didn’t stop to fuel there for fear that they might blow you up. Well, imagine seeing someone pointing a damn shotgun at the gas pump. Who would do that? It’s one of those things that should never even enter your mind as an option. He didn’t even try to knock off the lock with the butt of the gun. He just shot the freakin’ pump. I know it’s basically a rhetorical question, but how did that work out for you?

Big bada-boom. You more or less barbecued yourself for the ghouls. I honestly can’t imagine anything dumber. Congratulations Tommy, you are the winner of the ultimate Horror Movie Darwin Award by virtue of your firing a shotgun at a gas pump. Before I wrap this up, I’d like to thank everyone who has joined me on this voyage into cinematic idiocy. I hope you’ve enjoyed the countdown. If you did, leave a comment. Tell me what your favorite entry was or tell me your favorite stupid horror moment I missed. Ok folks, you know the drill by now, so say it with me…WAY TO GO DUMBASS!

Friday, June 3, 2011

30 Day Horror Challenge Strikes Back Day 3: Character you would kill yourself.

This was almost a tie. In my mind there have been two characters in the history of horror that stand head and obnoxious shoulders above the rest as the most odious pricks of all time. Interestingly, they’re both from movies in the Living Dead series. I was seriously considering Captain Rhodes from Day of the Dead. What an insufferable douchebag that guy was. I have a big anti-establishment rebellious bent in me, as does George Romero, so authority figures always rub me the wrong way anyway. When they’re power abusing bullies, however, they’re worse. For the record, it takes all the self control I can muster to refrain from taking any shots at the current United States political regime after that statement. This isn’t a political blog, though, so I’ll stick to the flicks. Anyway, then I realized that the question said it could not be an antagonist. While the zombies are technically the antagonists of Day of the Dead, the most direct threat to our heroes is Rhodes, making him the main antagonist. Therefore I decided to go with Romero’s other magnificent asshole, Harry Cooper.

Harry Cooper has been played twice. In the original 1968 Night of the Living Dead, he was played by Karl Hardman. He seems like a product of his times. He’s stuffy, gruff, and clearly used to being in charge. There are also racist undertones to the character, although they are never explicitly stated. While he is a jerk, you do kinda get the feeling that he is just trying his best to protect his wife and injured daughter. You can almost see where he’s coming from. Plus, I already used the original for day 1.

In 1990, Tom Towles played Cooper in the Night of the Living Dead remake. This is where the character becomes truly hate-able. Towles plays him as such an over the top asshole that he makes your skin crawl. It almost drives you crazy that you can’t jump through the screen just to kick him in the jewels. His smug smirk alone is enough to make you hope he dies. His idiotic insults, like “You Lamebrains!” or “You buncha Yo’Yo’s” just make him that much more ridiculous. He’s a coward too, as is evidenced when he hides in the cellar instead of helping even though he can hear Barbara and Ben upstairs. He believes that they should all go to the cellar and wait it out. Ben thinks they should stay upstairs. Cooper is so stuck on being right that he threatens not to open the cellar if they need to get in. He gets all twinkley eyed, grins, and says “you’re all gonna die up here.” I would have shot him myself that very moment. Not just from a “You’re a colossal dickhead” standpoint, but he is endangering the survival of the group. Later, he tries to steal the guns from Ben and Barbara. He slaps his wife. He almost gets Tom killed when he hesitates to hand him the nails. He shoots Ben when Ben tries to shoot his zombified daughter. Then, after all that, when it all starts going to hell, he runs and hides in the attic. What a complete bastard! This all works beautifully however, since the fate of his character has been changed from the original. I won’t give it away, but it is oh so satisfying.

Perhaps the worst thing about Cooper is that he was actually right. The cellar would have been the safest place. Problem is, no one would listen, naturally, to someone that’s such a complete SOB. Except for Barbara, everyone died trying to find alternatives to going in that cellar with this guy. So basically, in the end he was such a jerk that he indirectly cost everyone in the house their lives. Way to go Cooper. If I were Ben, I would have either shot you myself or thrown you to the zombies.

The character is well written, but would not have been nearly as effective without Towles’s performance. He specializes in these types of performances. This might have something to do with the fact that he plays scumbags and assholes better than anyone else in the business. Come to think of it, I can't remember once seeing this guy play a likable character. Lets take a look at his horror credits, shall we…

Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer – serial killer who rapes his own sister

NOTLD 90 – loudmouthed jerk who tries to kill the hero

The Pit and the Pendulum – lecherous strong-arm for the Spainish inquisition

The Prophecy 2 –idiotic detective

House of 1000 Corpses– small town dickhead cop

Devil’s Rejects – ghost of small town dickhead cop

The Borrower – slimy redneck, later body inhabited by a murderous criminal alien

Werewolf Women of the SS trailer – Nazi officer

Halloween (remake) – obnoxious parole board member who mocks Michael to his face

…and the list goes on. I’m not seeing a likable one in the bunch. Towles excels at making his characters as heinous and reviled as he can. He’s fine with that too. He said in an interview with killerreviews.com “There are goals you set when you accept doing any characters who are not very likable, and I've played only villains almost my entire career. And I really don't mind it, I kind of enjoy it…The objective is to enter into conflict and resolution. If I'm the conflict, why not be the best conflict you can be?” Amen Tom, and you do a hell of a job being a jackass. Your skill at raising the ire of an audience has never been more evident than it was with Harry Cooper. Well done. Prick!


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

30 Day Horror Challenge Strikes Back Day 1: A film you wish you could go live your life in for one day.

First off, the question originally read "Other than the blood and guts, a film you wish you could go live your life in for one day. " What other reason could you have for wanting to live in a horror movie? If you don't want blood and guts, go spend your one day in a romantic comedy or something. I just had to get that out of the way first since my choice is basically based on blood and guts. I’m gonna get this round of questions started with the same flick I ended the last one with. It’s kind of a Halloween 2 “sequel picking up right where the previous one ended” type of thing. I speak, of course of the original Night of the Living Dead. The zombie apocalypse has begun, but it’s still in the beginning stages. The scheize hasn’t really hit the fan yet like it would by the time “Dawn” rolled around. They are coming to get you Barbara, but they’re slow and there aren’t all that many of them yet.

Why the hell would I want to spend 24 hours amongst the rampaging undead? Well, lets be honest here, who among us that loves zombie flicks hasn’t thought about how we’d fare during the zombie apocalypse? I know I have. It’s a frequent topic of drunken discussion amongst my friends. Unfortunately, when there’s finally no more room in hell, I’ll be pretty much screwed. I’ve made my peace with the fact that I won’t do too well in the zombie infested world. When the dead walk the earth, society is going to break down. When society breaks down, pharmaceuticals are going to be hard to come by. I’m diabetic. It won’t take long for me to run out of pharmacies to pillage for my insulin. If the electricity goes out, the whole supply goes bad due to lack of refrigeration. Just like anyone else who is reliant on medication for survival, I’ll be ghoul food sooner rather than later.

If I could live in the undead nightmare for just one day, however, that wouldn’t be a factor. I could be the zombie ass kicker I know I could be without the knowledge that I was going down soon anyway. My fantasy of the world being my shambling, rotting shooting gallery would come true. Since I would only be there one day, none of my actions would have any long term ramifications at all. It would basically be a life or death video game. After a day playing the ultimate “survival horror” game, I could return to my normal life (I use normal very loosely) a happy man, knowing in my heart that I survived that day. Then, when the undead hordes finally do arise, I’ve gotten the headshots out of my system. I can just barricade myself inside a candy store, eat all the forbidden delicacies I can, sit back and, in the words of Jim Morrison, watch the whole shithouse go up in flames.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

30 Day Horror Challenge Day 30 - Your favorite horror film of all time

So here we are, at the finale of round one of the 30 Day Horror Challenge. I'd like to thank all the new friends and readers I've found during this event, and I hope you'll stick around. Now that we've got that out of the way, I was having a little trouble with how to approach this post. During film school, I wrote extensively about my favorite movie of all time, the original Night of the Living Dead. No less than 10 different papers in fact. While my love for this movie knows no bounds, I had to do something different if I was going to write it again. Well, this is certainly different. The idea for this post came from a combination of my friend Travis and my mother, so if you don’t dig it, blame them. This is my attempt to tell the story of my favorite horror flick in the style of my childhood favorite author, the incomparable Dr. Seuss. So here it is folks, the Seussification of Night of the Living Dead…

“They’re coming to get you Barbara,”

Johnny said with a grin

“They’re coming for you,”

He teased again and again


But his words, they came true

When a zombie attacked.

Smacked his head on a tombstone

And Whack! His head cracked.


Barbara, run for your life!

Barbara, run for the car!

But Johnny’s got the keys,

So you ain’t running far.


Pull the brake! Now the car

Rolls straight into a tree.

And the zombie’s still coming.

Barbara, you’d better flee!


Run to that farmhouse,

That one off in the distance.

There are ghouls, but don’t worry,

You’ll have some assistance


From Ben, who arrives

Tire iron a’ swinging.

He’s pinging, and zinging’

And stinging , and bringing


Down all of the ghouls

With a blow to the head.

‘Cause that’s the only way

To stop the living dead.


Ben starts barricading.

Barbara gets hysterical.

Her ranting and raving,

Is downright unbearable.


She tries opening the door,

And that’s the last straw.

There’s just one thing to do,

Yep, right cross to the jaw!


Thank God she’s out cold.

That girl’s rambling was endless.

With her out of the way

Ben can get down to business.


BANG BANG BANG goes the hammer.

Board this place up tight!

BANG BANG BANG, they won’t

Be munching on us tonight.


But who is this now

Coming up from the cellar?

It’s Cooper, a loudmouthed

Balding ol’ feller.


His daughter Karen’s been bitten

She’s down there with her mom

And a cute teenaged couple

Named Judy and Tom.


Cooper says “To the cellar!”

(turns out he was right)

But Ben disagrees,

And the two start to fight.


“I won’t go in the cellar!

I won’t go, you hear?

You can be boss down there,

But I’m the boss up here.


That cellar’s a deathtrap,

A deathtrap I say.

If those things get in here,

Then we can’t get away.”


Hang on, there’s a TV,

Find out where help is at!

But all they heard was

“It has been established that


The recently deceased

While the body’s still fresh

Are returning to life

And seeking human flesh”


But there are rescue stations!

Our plan is now clear.

‘Cause Willard is just

Seventeen miles from here.


Ben’s got a truck

But the gas tank is dry.

There’s a pump, and it’s locked

But it’s still worth a try.


'Cause if we don’t go now,

Then we just might be stuck,

So Tom, Judy, and Ben

Go to gas up the truck.


Ben shoots the lock off the pump

With a .22

(Don’t try that at home kids,

It’s a dumb thing to do)


But Tom’s spilling the gas.

Now they’re all out of luck.

‘Cause Ben’s torch blazes on

In the back of the truck.


Then the truck goes KABOOM!

And the kids meet their doom

As a barbecue

The living dead will consume.


With his truck now en fuego

Ben runs for the house…

Wait a minute,

Was that zombie eating a mouse?


Ben yells “Let me In Cooper!”

But he won’t, it’s no use,

So then when Ben gets in,

That’s when all hell breaks loose.


Cooper tries for Ben’s gun

And gets shot in the fight,

Zombie Johnny drags Barbara

Off into the night,


Karen munches on Daddy,

Who she’s disemboweled,

And stabs mommy again

And again with a trowel.


The boards start to give

And the zombies flood in.

Bolt yourself in the cellar

Or you’ll get eaten Ben!


Come morning, an army

Of rednecks with guns

Are hunting down zombies,

Shooting every last one.

And I really must say,

It looks like lots of fun.


Ben hears gunshots and thinks

Hooray! Help has arrived!

He comes upstairs, thinking

He actually survived.

But…


Through the window he looks

Just like the living dead

So the redneck takes aim

And shoots Ben in the head.


That’s the end of the story

Ben’s the last to expire

Our hero’s now just

Another one for the fire.


Where do we go from here,

As we watch mankind fall?

If you’re asking me, I say

We go to the mall.


Night of the Living Dead

A masterpiece, there’s no doubt.

Two severed thumbs up.

Nathan says check it out!

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