Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated
Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated
| 01 September 2009 (USA)
Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated Trailers

Night of the Living Dead: REANIMATED features the work of various artists, animators, and filmmakers from around the globe. The mixed media featured include puppetry, CGI, hand-drawn animation, illustration, acrylics, claymation, and even 'animated' tattoos, just to name a few. This mass-collaboration approach is less about remaking Romero's film and more about viewing the classic through an experimental lens. Instead of trying to alter Image Ten's work, NOTLD:R seeks to showcase the responses that artists from around the world have had to this landmark film.

Reviews
jacobjohntaylor1

Taking about making something scary look very ridiculous. They keeping go back and fourth with definite styles of animation. Play the soundtrack from the original. Cartoon mice are in this movie. So are puppets. There is ever footage from the original with weird images flying around there heads. Come on this is not a 4.6 it is just overrating it. I give this 4 out 10. Because it is pointless movie. Do not bother with it and just see the original. It is one of the scariest movies made in the 60's. And this does nothing for it. I wasted my time with this believe me. Do not wast your time with this. Do not send money on this. It is a rip off.

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Mortimer Snerd

This was a poorly conceived project. Too much of this film looks like it was created by a 5 year old. I've never seen anything as crudely produced as this. Very little of it is actually animated, in the traditional sense. A lot of it looks rushed, as though they were in a hurry to fill-in unfinished portions. With some scenes, original footage was processed with various filters as a low-budget cheat. The visual style changes quickly and abruptly throughout. The worst part of it is, the suspense and atmosphere of the original has been degraded into a laughably bad imitation. You have been warned. Avoid this version like the plague.

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Woodyanders

Let's face it, folks. The zombie horror sub-genre has really been done to death (pun intended), what with all the sequels, remakes, and shoddy straight-to-DVD crud that delivers little to nothing new. So it's really saying something to note that this particular reimagining of Romero's 1968 classic is anything but another dreary run-of-the-mill rehash. Almost 150 artists from all over the world pay affectionate tribute to their favorite scenes and the picture's most iconic moments using all different styles of animation that include oil paintings, comic book panels, acrylic, CGI, legos, stop-motion animation, rotoscoping, Claymation, and even sock puppets (!). Some approaches are serious and respectful, others more comic and irreverent, all are impressive for their admirable sense of bold go-for-broke imagination alone. Granted, the broad assortment of wildly contrasting styles occasionally threaten to cancel each other out, but fortunately director Mike Schneider keeps it all cohesive and compelling throughout. Wisely retaining the original score and voices of the cast members, this film does a surprisingly sound job of recapturing the stark terror and grim humor of this groundbreaking fright feature without ever diminishing its impact or importance. Best of all, this movie offers one the rare opportunity to see the living dead premise from a fresh and unique perspective. Proof positive that there's still plenty of life left in the moldy old zombie horror sub-genre.

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Michael_Elliott

Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated (2009) ** 1/2 (out of 4) One could argue that George Romero's 1968 film NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD was one of the greatest horror movies ever made. One could also argue that it has caused some of the most outrageous and stupid moments in terms of rip-offs, remakes and flat out idiotic fan movies. You had a remake in 1990, a 3-D remake, countless impersonators, fan documentaries, a couple sequels that would eventually be remade as well and all of this because of there being no copyright on the film. Oh, and let's not even go into the countless Italian, German and Japanese films. I think the biggest crap-fest of them all was the "30th Anniversary" gig that had John Russo filming new scenes and adding them back into Romero's film. This film, subtitled REANIMATED, features the original audio track from the Romero film but with a new look.The entire concept of this film is that they'd take the soundtrack and dialogue from the Romero film and let artists from around the world add their visuals. With this we get animation, claymation, stop-motion, comic book visuals, acrylics, sock puppets and we even get a strange cartoon-like version of when the zombie reaches through the window and grabs Ben. There are all sorts of styles going on here and they change quite often, sometimes a single shot changes direction. I must admit that this is a rather strange way to watch a movie but there are a few styles here that I'd love to see the entire movie made of. This type of thing certainly isn't going to be for everyone and I think it's safe to say that it wears out its welcome before the end credits but at the same time there's no question that a lot of imagination went into this thing and I can't help but respect it. I'm not sure who exactly to recommend it to but if watched in pieces I think most people will at least respect the thing. What impressed me the most is how it was all put together with countless people giving their impressions of a scene and for the most part it all goes together very well. Needless to say, I think some moments work better than others but you have to expect that. The scene with Ben first showing up was extremely good as was the first meeting between Ben and Cooper, the truck catching fire and of course the final attack sequence when the zombies are entering the house. Since the movie uses the original audio I was surprised to see how suspenseful it actually is even without the original footage to back it up. REANIMATED certainly isn't a masterpiece but it's a rather unique item that's certainly a lot more imaginative then countless big-budget films out there.

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