Greatest Zombie Films: 1960s - 1970s
(chronological by time period and film title)
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Title Screen
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Zombie Films |
Poster
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Teenage Zombies (1960)
d. Jerry Warren, 71 minutes, GBM Productions/Governor
Films
Tagline: "Young pawns thrust into pulsating
cages of horror in a sadistic experiment! "
Setting: Mullett Island
Story: While waterskiing, four teens came upon the off-shore,
remote Mullett Island used as a testing center, where they were
held captive in cages. Dr. Myra (Katherine Victor), a deranged
female scientist and agents from "an
eastern power" (the Soviet's Red Curtain) were conducting unusual experiments
with a secret nerve gas formula - to turn Americans into a slave
race of easily-controllable zombies. Dr.
Myra was aided by mute hunchback Ivan (Chuck Niles),
and the local Sheriff (Mike Concannon) who was in cahoots with
the evil foreigners, supplying them with test subjects (drunks,
prisoners).
Notable: Filmed in 1957, but released in mid-April of
1960. A poorly acted and scripted, low-budget, teen horror-exploitation
film, perfect for a double-bill at a drive-in. A box-office bomb.
Remade by the same director as Frankenstein
Island (1981). |
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The Plague of the Zombies (1966,
UK) (aka The Zombies)
d. John Gilling, 91/90 minutes, Hammer Film Productions/Seven Arts/20th
Century Fox
Tagline: "Only The Lord Of The Dead Could Unleash
Them!"
Setting: In 1860, in the English countryside, in Cornwall.
Story: A mysterious plague-epidemic arose in a local English
mining town after exploitative, mad Cornish Squire Clive Hamilton
(John Carson) had turned the deceased villagers into voodoo-controlled,
shambling zombies - now undead slaves who could turn murderous. The
town's Dr. Peter Tompson (Brook Williams) and his wife Alice Mary
Tompson (Jacqueline Pearce) sought aid from Professor Sir James Forbes
(André Morell)
(and his single daughter Sylvia Forbes (Diane Clare)), to investigate
the problem. Alice died from the plague, and Sir James Forbes was
shocked to discover empty coffins in the graves of the plague victims.
Notable: From Hammer Films, originally double-billed with
the bigger hit Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966). The plot
borrowed from White Zombie (1932). The film's best nightmarish
sequence was one in which decaying graveyard cadavers dug their way up
through the earth to surround the shocked dreamer and clutch at him with
clawing dead fingers. Another notable dream image was a realistic zombie
decapitation. |
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The Astro-Zombies (1968) (aka
Space Zombies, or The Space Vampires)
d. Ted V. Mikels, 91 minutes, Ram Ltd./Geneni Film Distributors
Tagline: "DISMEMBERED BODIES...TRANSPLANTED
ORGANS Are Used To Create The...ASTRO-ZOMBIES."
Setting: Los Angeles, CA
Story: After being fired by a Space Agency, disgruntled
rocket scientist Dr. DeMarco (John Carradine) became a vengeful,
mad zombie master, with his knowledge of how to remotely control
artificial humans who could endure for lengthy space missions. With
mute, deformed hunchback lab assistant Franchot (William Bagdad)
in a basement laboratory, he planned to revitalize the corpses and
body parts (brains mostly) of mutilated murder victims to create
a solar-powered (for the artificial heart organ), radio-controlled
super-human monster (Astro-Zombie), with synthetic blood and silicon-enhanced
skin. Unfortunately, an astro-zombie test subject escaped and went
on a murderous spree with a machete. Astrozombies wore black, had
white skull-like plaster masks, and a forehead with a red and silver
crest for regenerating themselves with light. With the CIA on his
trail led by Holman (Wendell Corey in his last film role), the government
agents also pursued an international espionage ring led by the beautiful
Communist Chinese agent Satana (Tura Satana, a busty Russ Meyers
star) and her Mexican spy partners who wanted the doctor's taped
knowledge for their own evil purposes.
Notable: A low-budget, incoherent, very inferior zombie film
and cult drive-in classic, with poor production values, and some
sexploitation elements (half-naked, gold bikinied female on a lab
table, and a painted stripper-nightclub dancer). The film's poster
advertised: "SEE Astro Space Laboratory," "SEE Brutal
Mutants Menace Beautiful Girls," "SEE Crazed Corpse Stealers," "SEE
Beserk Human Transplants." With three very poor sequels, from
2010-2012. |
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Night of the Living Dead (1968)
d. George A. Romero, 96 minutes, Image
Ten/Laurel Group/Market Square Productions/Off Color Films/Continental
Distributing/Walter Reade Organization
Tagline: "They Won't Stay Dead!"
Setting: A deserted farmhouse in rural Western Pennsylvania.
Story: Indiscriminate, reanimated flesh-eating 'ghouls' lumbered
stiffly out of their graves toward a barricaded house after killing
Johnny (Russell Streiner), who was visiting the gravesite of his father
with his sister Barbra (Judith O'Dea). Seven random, bickering people
sought refuge inside the nondescript farmhouse as flesh-hungry, undead
corpses stalked around outside. The most seriously affected was Barbra,
catatonic from seeing her brother die. It was speculated that a radioactive
NASA Venus space probe-satellite returning to Earth was deliberately
exploded, and because of increasing radiation, possibly caused recently-deceased
corpses to rise up, and become ravenous zombies. The terror came from
their relentless attack on the fugitive survivors hiding to escape
the zombies' infectious bites. They vainly tried to escape by acquiring
gasoline from a nearby pump to fill the truck, but had to fight off
dozens of hungry zombies. Soon the threat was coming from inside the
house too, with a struggle for power between resourceful and smart
black man Ben (Duane Jones) and impulsive, obnoxious family man Harry
Cooper (Karl Hardman). Audiences were struck by the film’s
despairing tone, tragically ironic ending, and depiction of a lifeless
dehumanized society.
Notable: This was a low-budget, independent, genre-defining,
zombie classic. It was the debut of the 'modern'
zombie film (although they were never called 'zombies' but 'ghouls'),
about the mysterious reanimation of the recent-dead. Part 1 of Romero's
original zombie trilogy. It was the first of a canon of zombie classics,
and it marked the rise of independent horror. It was also Romero's
debut film. The low-budget black-and-white film was made documentary-style,
with natural lighting and a handheld camera to accentuate the besieged
farmhouse occupants' visceral fear. Remade
as
Night of the Living Dead (1990), by gore F/X expert turned director
Tom Savini, with a revised screenplay written by George Romero (with
a reworked beginning and ending). The film was also remade in a 3-D
version by producer/director Jeff Broadstreet as Night of the Living
Dead 3D (2006). With one of the first black heroes
(Duane Jones) in the horror genre. With the memorable line of dialogue: "They're
coming to get you, Barbra!'' It showed violated bodies and families
torn apart by the living dead, illustrating how nothing was sacred
in contemporary society. (A sick, zombified adolescent girl named Karen
Cooper (Kyra Schon) killed her own mother Helen (Marilyn Eastman) with
a garden trowel and then ate her.) |
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Children Shouldn't Play With Dead
Things (1973, or 1972) (aka Revenge of the Living Dead)
d. Bob Clark, 87 minutes, Geneni Film Distributors
Tagline: "You're Invited To Orville's "Coming-Out" Party...It'll
Be A Scream...YOURS!!!"
Setting: Island cemetery off the coast of Florida.
Story: Five desperate theatre actors and their bullying, mean-spirited
troupe director Alan (Alan Ormsby) explored a remote Florida island
cemetery (filled with criminals) and the nearby unhabited caretaker's
cottage. Alan proclaimed that they were there to perform an after-midnight,
Satanic, necromantic-seance black ritual with a book of spells (grimoire)
to summon the dead to rise from their graves. They were forced to
exhume the recently-deceased corpse of Orville Dunworth (Seth Sklarey).
Although Alan revealed they were all just the butt of a practical
joke, the group unwittingly unleashed cannibalistic zombies that
emerged from their graves and surrounded the caretaker's house
- and eventually consumed all of them (in the film's final third).
In the final scene, the zombies set sail for the mainland.
Notable: A low-budget, zombie horror-comedy, inspired in part
by Night
of the Living Dead (1968). Directed by Bob Clark - his feature
film debut. He was more famous for Black Christmas (1974), Murder
By Decree (1979), Porky's (1982)
and A Christmas Story (1983). |
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Let Sleeping Corpses Lie (1974,
Sp./It.) (aka The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue, or Non Si
Deve Profanare Il Sonno Dei Morti)
d. Jorge Grau, 95/85 minutes, Star Films
S.A./Flaminia Produzioni Cinematografiche
Tagline: "They tampered with nature - now they
must pay the price..."
Setting: English countryside.
Story: A new experimental, Department of Agriculture pest-control
device (using ultra-sonic wave pulses to thump the ground and kill
insects) have stirred zombies to awaken from the dead. In the anti-climactic
police drama, the Inspector Sergeant (Arthur Kennedy) suspected
two hippie newcomers, longhaired antique shop dealer George Meaning
(Ray Lovelock) and his traveling companion Edna Simmonds (Cristina
Galbó) as
devil worshippers, and responsible for
the local mutilation murders. They never suspected that the recently-revived
living dead had a thirst for human flesh. Newborns also became
vicious monsters.
Notable: A Spanish/Italian production, with many alternative
titles for all of its international releases (others were Don't
Open the Window, Do Not Profane the Sleep of the Dead, etc.). |
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Sugar Hill (1974) (aka The Zombies of Sugar Hill)
d. Paul Maslansky, 91 minutes, American International Pictures (AIP)
Tagline(s): "Meet SUGAR HILL and her ZOMBIE
HIT MEN...The Mafia has never met anything like them!" and "The Devil
Woman - Her Voodoo Powers Raised The Dead, She's Super-Natural!"
Setting: In the Deep South, New Orleans, Louisiana.
Story: Afro-haired heroine Diana "Sugar" Hill (Marki
Bey) was a sexy, smart fashion photographer. She helped her boyfriend
Langston (Larry D. Johnson) operate a voodoo-themed bar named Club
Haiti. Langston was ambushed and beaten to death when he refused
to pay off a bunch of syndicate mobster enforcers, headed by funky,
pimpish black mob boss Fabulous (Charles F. Robinson). The main head
boss was mean, playboyish villain Morgan (Robert Quarry). Vengeful
girlfriend Sugar, who inherited the club, ventured into the swamps
of her ancestral bayou homeland, to meet with 100 year-old voodoo
priestess Mama Maitresse (Zara Cully, aka Mother Jefferson on The
Jeffersons TV
show). The priestess conjured up voodoo god and Lord of the Dead
Baron Samedi (Don Pedro Colley), with two undead wives. In exchange
for Sugar's soul, the Baron raised an army of shackled, cobweb-covered,
machete-wielding, silver bulging-eyed zombies - ex-slaves from Guinea
in the 1840s. With her undead army, Sugar sought seductive vengeance
against the mafia thugs, threatening them: "Hey
whitey! You and your punk friends killed my man!" There were
many PG-death scenes: one thug
was fed to hungry pigs, one was given a zombie massage, another died
a voodoo doll stabbing death, and another was locked in a snake-filled
coffin. Sugar's ex-boyfriend Valentine
(Richard Lawson) was investigating, and found evidence
of a slave shackle at one crime scene. Sugar used voodoo magic on
him to send him down stairs and break his legs. Morgan was lured
to Sugar's plantation, where he fled from all his undead minions
(killed and reanimated) into the swamp and was drowned in quicksand. As
payment for the retribution against the mobsters, rather than taking
Sugar for himself, the Baron snatched Morgan's white racist, chain-smoking
blonde girlfriend Celeste (Betty Anne Rees) and dragged her to Hell.
Notable: An overlooked horror-blacksploitation action film
from the mid-1970s. The resurrected voodoo zombies weren't flesh-hungry,
but they did function as murderous thugs following the commands of
their evil master, similar to the zombies of the 1930s and 1940s.
With the theme song: "Supernatural Voodoo Woman" sung by The Originals.
This film was not to be confused with the later film with the same
title, Sugar Hill (1993) with Wesley Snipes.
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Shock Waves (1977) (aka
Death Corps, and Almost Human)
d. Ken Wiederhorn, 85 minutes, Zopix Company/Joseph Brenner Associates
Tagline(s): "Once They Were Almost Human! Beneath
the living... Beyond the dead... From the depths of Hell's Ocean!"
and "The Deep End of Horror!"
Setting: Off Florida, on a remote island near the Bahamas.
Story: In flashback, rescued tourist Rose (Brooke Adams)
told about the fate of her yachting party. She was onboard a
Caribbean excursion boat named Bonaventure with partner Chuck
(Fred Buch) and an argumentative married couple Norman
(Jack Davidson) and Beverly (D.J. Sidney). The boat was captained
by cranky
and salty Capt. Ben Morris (John Carradine) with hunky first mate
Keith (Luke Halpin) and the boat's heavy-drinking cook Dobbs (Don
Stout). After having navigation problems and experiencing an orangish
haze, at night the boat hit a rotting WWII freighter caught in a
reef - the damaged boat was shipwrecked
and the stranded tourists took a lifeboat to a nearby strange remote
island. The Captain was missing and found drowned. The island's sole
dilapidated, and deserted hotel was inhabited by mad
German doctor (Peter Cushing), an aging, self-exiled Nazi SS Commander.
Pale green-skinned, white-haired, face-scarred, dark-goggled zombies
with black SS uniforms appeared from underwater at the site of the
wreckage, and killed Dobbs. The SS Commander described how he had
led a "Death Corps" (Totenkorps), composed of thugs and
villains who were transformed into zombified super-soldiers who
could live anywhere (even underwater) and fight with their bare
hands - bred as an invincible weapon by the Nazis. The uncontrollable
zombies (who could not distinguish between friend and foe) were
never deployed, but recalled. When the war was over, the exiled
Commander sunk his ghost-ship freighter The
Pretorius with
the zombies onboard. When the
Bonaventure struck the same freighter, it awakened the dead
cargo of zombies, who were now reappearing and threatening everyone
- the Commander was even drowned by them. The film ended with members
of the group fighting off the zombies, who drowned them one-by-one.
The sole remaining survivor in a glass-bottom boat was the hospitalized
Rose, now apparently insane from her ordeal.
Notable: The best of its low-budget sub-genre - the underwater
Nazi zombie movie (other examples of Nazi zombie flicks were Zombie
Lake (1981, Fr./Sp.), Night of the Zombies (1981), and Dead
Snow (2009, Norway)). A moody cult film without much gore, but
lots of atmosphere. This was director Ken Wiederhorn's debut feature
film. |
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Dawn
of the Dead (1978, It./US) (aka Zombi)
d. George A. Romero, 127/139 minutes, Laurel
Group/United Film Distribution Company (UFDC)
Tagline: "When there's no more room in HELL, the
dead will walk the EARTH."
Setting: Secluded Pittsburgh shopping mall (Monroeville).
Story: Unexpectedly, the dead were re-animating into flesh-eating
zombies. Four people: TV anchorwoman (Francine Parker (Gaylen Ross)),
her traffic helicopter-pilot boyfriend (Stephen "Flyboy" Andrews
(David Emge)) , and two Philadelphia SWAT cops (Roger "Trooper" DeMarco
(Scott Reiniger) and Peter Washington (Ken Foree)) flew in a helicopter
from Philadelphia to Western Pennsylvania (the Pittsburgh area), where
they barricaded themselves within a well-stocked mall for sanctuary.
They were attacked by ravenous, shuffling zombies and a gang of post-apocalyptic
nomadic bikers.
Notable: Part 2 of Romero's original zombie
trilogy. The most profitable of all the Romero zombie films,
and the one received most favorably by critics. It was the first
film in the Romero "Dead" franchise to refer to the undead
as "zombies."
The biting social satire equated zombies with brainwashed automaton consumers
slowly shuffling their way through malls as soothing Muzak played. It
was explained why the zombies congregated there: "Some kind of instinct.
Memory, of what they used to do. This was an important place in their
lives." Special
make-up effects by Tom Savini. Included a memorable death - a zombie's
head sliced by helicopter blades. The satirical film was a strong indictment
of rampant 1970s capitalistic mall-consumerism. The survivors were living
the American Dream in a barricaded storage area, distracted by their
material luxuries while undead danger lurked nearby. Remade as Dawn
of the Dead (2004) by Zack Snyder (his feature film
debut). |
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Zombie (1979, It.) (aka Zombi2,
or Zombie Flesh Eaters)
d. Lucio Fulci, 91 minutes, Variety Film
Production/Jerry Gross Organization
Tagline: "When The Earth Spits Out The Dead...They
Will Return to Tear the Flesh of the Living!"
Setting: Island in the Virgin Islands (Saint Thomas), Matool
Island.
Story: The film opened with a zombie
attack on two patrol officers when they investigated a seemingly-abandoned
sailboat adrift in NY harbor (a scene lifted from Nosferatu (1922)).
Afterwards, reporter Peter West (Ian McCulloch) joined up with Anne
Bowles (Tisa Farrow), the daughter of the missing boat owner (scientist
father Dr. Bowles (Ugo Bologna)). A note from her father claimed he
had caught a mysterious, contagious disease and had died on the island
of Matool, which was plagued by increasing zombie attacks. The two
traveled to the tropical Caribbean island, to meet with Dr. David Menard
(Richard Johnson). He was attempting to cure a plague (caused by a
voodoo curse) that made dead people come back to life - and attack
the islanders. Menard told them that Anne's father had died, but was
revived from his grave through miraculous voodoo. In
the film's blood-splattered climax, a horde of flesh-eating zombies
(all rising from their graves) attacked the few human survivors on
the island in a siege on a hospital, similar to the attacks in Night
of the Living Dead (1968).
Notable: One of the best and well-known of the violent Italian
gore-zombie films, also with a sexploitation spin. Two
memorable scenes: Paolo Menard's (Olga Karlatos) eye was pierced with
a splinter of wood by a zombie, and the scene of a zombie fighting
a shark underwater. As a promotional gimmick, the Italian rip-off title
alluded to it being a sequel to Zombi (the
Italian title of George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead (1978)),
but the films were unrelated. |
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