American director George A. Romero was making films from the age of 14 -- like most teen movie enthusiasts, with an 8 mm camera. Matriculating into the industrial-film business in Pittsburgh, Romero accrued enough capital to make his first feature-length film in 1968, a graphically gruesome zombie picture entitled Night of the Living Dead. Barely making back its cost on its initial release, the movie received some welcome, if adverse, publicity when Reader's Digest devoted an article to it. The magazine was appalled at the scenes of cannibalism and similar horrors, going so far as to insist that a movement be started to have the picture banned. Naturally, this made the movie more popular than ever, much more so than if Reader's Digest had simply ignored it. And the subsequent profits of Night of the Living Dead enabled Romero to finance several more low-budget scare pictures before he broke into the mainstream with Dawn of the Dead in 1978, a semi-comic sequel to his first film. Day of the Dead (1985), the third of the Dead Trilogy, was more elaborate than his earlier productions, but also more disappointing. Still, Romero could point with pride to such films as Creepshow (1980), Martin (1978), and his weekly TV terror anthology Tales From the Darkside (1984-1986), which belied its tiny budget with excellent writing, first-rate actors (Barnard Hughes, Fritz Weaver, Jerry Stiller, Eddie Bracken, et al.) and bone-chilling makeup effects. Although remaining in the realm of B-movies by choice, Romero has exerted considerable influence on an entire school of higher-budget horror directors, notably John Carpenter, Wes Craven, and especially Brian De Palma. Romero is married to actress and long-time collaborator Christine Forrest.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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George A. Romero Presents Deadtime Stories, Vol. 2
Actor, Executive Producer |
2011 | |||
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The Walking Dead Girls
Conception |
2011 | |||
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The Crazies
Executive Producer |
2010 | |||
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Nightmares in Red, White and Blue
Participant |
2009 | |||
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Survival of the Dead
Director, Executive Producer, Screenwriter |
2009 | |||
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Dead Eyes Open
Actor |
2008 | |||
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Dead On: The Life and Cinema of George A. Romero
Interviewee |
2008 | |||
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Drive-In Madness
Participant |
2008 | |||
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Fantastic Flesh: The Art of Make-Up EFX
Participant |
2008 | |||
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George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead
Director, Producer, Screenwriter |
2007 | |||
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Land of the Dead
Director, Screenwriter |
2005 | |||
| 2005 | ||||
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Dawn of the Dead
From Screenplay by |
2004 | |||
| 2002 | ||||
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Masters of Horror
Interviewee |
2002 | |||
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Bruiser
Director, Screenwriter |
2000 | |||
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The American Nightmare
Participant |
2000 | |||
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The Dark Half
Director, Executive Producer, Screenwriter |
1991 | |||
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The Silence of the Lambs
Actor |
1991 | |||
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Night of the Living Dead
Executive Producer, Screenwriter |
1990 | |||
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Tales From the Darkside: The Movie
Screenwriter |
1990 | |||
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Two Evil Eyes
Director, Screenwriter |
1990 | |||
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Document of the Dead
Interviewee |
1989 | |||
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Monkey Shines
Director, Screenwriter |
1988 | |||
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Creepshow 2
Screenwriter |
1987 | |||
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Day of the Dead
Actor, Director, Screenwriter |
1985 | |||
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Tales From the Darkside [TV Series]
Executive Producer |
1983 | |||
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Creepshow
Director, Editor |
1982 | |||
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Knightriders
Director, Editor, Screenwriter |
1981 | |||
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Dawn of the Dead
Actor, Director, Editor, Screenwriter |
1978 | |||
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Martin
Actor, Director, Editor, Screenwriter |
1978 | |||
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Season of the Witch
Cinematographer, Director, Editor, Screenwriter |
1973 | |||
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The Crazies
Director, Editor, Screenwriter |
1973 | |||
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There's Always Vanilla
Cinematographer, Director, Editor |
1972 | |||
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Night of the Living Dead
Actor, Cinematographer, Director, Editor, Screen Story, Screenwriter |
1968 |



