Document of the Dead

Starring:John Amplas, Carl Augenstein, Steve Bissette, David Emge, Ken Foree, Christine Forrest, Michael Gornick, Joe Kane, Nicole Potter, Scott H. Reiniger, George A. Romero, Richard P. Rubinstein, Tom Savini, Susan Tyrrell, Gahan Wilson
Studio: Synapse Video
Product Type: DVD
Editorial Review:
Description
This amazing documentary, now available for the first time on DVD, highlights the films of the great horror director, George A. Romero. An intimate look at Romero^Rs creative process, this film contains an outstanding collection of interviews and behind-the-scenes footage on the set of Dawn Of The Dead. Also included are demonstrations of how some of the over-the-top special effects were created by Make-Up Artist, Tom Savini. Contains scenes from Night Of The Living Dead and Martin and Monkey Shines.
Average customer rating:
- A glimpse at the brilliance that is George A. Romero.
- A Behind-the-Scenes Look at an Independent Filmmaker...
- A must for Dawn of the Dead fans!
- An Excellent Documentary On George Romero From Roy Frumkes
- Zzzzzzz..........Boring..........
|
Document of the Dead
Starring: John Amplas , Carl Augenstein , Steve Bissette , David Emge , and Ken Foree
Manufacturer: Synapse Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Action & Adventure
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Biography
| Documentary
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Documentary
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Educational
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
George Romero
| Horror Masters
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Emge, David
| ( E )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Foree, Ken
| ( F )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Savini, Tom
| ( S )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Tyrrell, Susan
| ( T )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Action & Adventure
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
DVDs Under $9.99
| Today's Deals in DVD
| Special Features
| DVD
| Video
( D )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- The Crazies
- Dawn of the Dead (Ultimate Edition)
- Day of the Dead (Divimax Special Edition)
- Night of the Living Dead (Millennium Edition)
- Land of the Dead (Unrated Edition)
ASIN: B00000FYXW
Release Date: 1998-10-14 |
Description
This amazing documentary, now available for the first time on DVD, highlights the films of the great horror director, George A. Romero. An intimate look at Romero^Rs creative process, this film contains an outstanding collection of interviews and behind-the-scenes footage on the set of Dawn Of The Dead. Also included are demonstrations of how some of the over-the-top special effects were created by Make-Up Artist, Tom Savini. Contains scenes from Night Of The Living Dead and Martin and Monkey Shines.
Customer Reviews:
A glimpse at the brilliance that is George A. Romero........2004-02-29
A group of students from the School of Visual Arts got access to several days on the set of George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead and a documentary took shape. Largely intended to be shown to film students as an educational tool in preparing them for the business side of film production, the movie also is a wonderful showcase of writer/director George A. Romero's fierce independent streak and unique handling of the genre. Those just wanting to see Romero showing zombies where to stand or Savini doing his stuff had better stick to the DVD extras on Day of the Dead (or the upcoming multi-disc edition of Dawn that Anchor Bay is putting together), for this documentary is more studious of the man's artistic intent and the nature of independent movie making itself. For serious fans of Romero, however, this is an essential annotation to the Dead trilogy. Highest recommendation.
A Behind-the-Scenes Look at an Independent Filmmaker..........2003-07-29
In 1978, film professor/filmmaker Roy Frumkes wrote, produced & directed Document of the Dead chronicaling indepedent filmmaker George A. Romero. Filmed over one long weekend on the set of Dawn of the Dead, Frumkes conducts interviews with various members of the cast and crew, including Romero himself. Mixed with footage from Night of the Living Dead, Martin, Romero's modern-day vampire film, and Dawn of the Dead, the documentary tells it's own story concerning a little guy fighting the system. The little guy being Romero and the system being the modern film industry.
Simply put, this is one of the best documentaries concerning filmmaking. Going from pre-production to distribution, Document of the Dead covers all the grounds that Romero went through in order to get Dawn of the Dead on the silver screen. It's a treat particularly for Dawn fans being that it contains scenes not seen in any version of Dawn of the Dead and the now-legendary alternate ending is addressed. Also worth mentioning is Make-up Effects Artist/Stunt Cordinator/Actor Tom Savini at work creating zombies out of filmmaker Frumkes and his then-girlfriend.
My main complaint is the 4th Act/"10 Years Later..." segment shot on the set of Two Evil Eyes. The documentary was just fine chronicaling the first 10 years of Romero's career. Though, the footage/interviews aren't bad in any manner, the documentary worked better concerning Romero's attempts to make his films his way in Pittsburgh during the 1970s. Once the main story arc (Romero fighting for his cut of Dawn of the Dead for U.S. theatres and succedding with the film becoming a critical/commercial success!) ends, there's nowhere else to go. I can't help but give a little complaint with the lack of any mention towards Romero's post-Dawn films such as Knightriders, Creepshow, and Day of the Dead.
In the Bonus Materials for the dvd, there's a commentary track with Frumkes and other members of the crew. Frumkes is nice, professional and has only kind things to say about Romero, Savini & the other people he was around while making Document. He's certainly a major film fan. It's full of facts and fun antedotes from the set. Well-worth a listen! Also there's deleted footage from the original cut of Document shot on the Dawn set and unused interviews from the "10 Years Later..." segment.
All that aside, Document of the Dead is worth seeing if you're a fan of the horror genre, George A. Romero, or just films in general.
A must for Dawn of the Dead fans!.......2001-06-28
As a documentary, this film could have been a bit better. But as a companion to Dawn of the Dead, this is excellent stuff. The film offers plenty of behind-the-scenes material in the Monroeville Mall. One is able to see this incredible space transformed into one of the great film sets of all time. There are also interviews with cast members and with Tom Savini as well, not to mention Savini diving from the balcony in his death-stunt. Document of the Dead also goes into other Romero films with behind-the-scenes and other business bits like distribution, etc. However, there is quite a bit of Dawn material here, making this essential for the die-hard fan.
An Excellent Documentary On George Romero From Roy Frumkes.......2001-06-13
This has to be one of the most thorough documentaries ever made about flimaking, independent or otherwise. It covers every facet involved; pre-production, scriptwriting, casting, storyboarding, production, post production, editing, distribution. It has interesting interviews with Romero, (producer) Richard Rubinstein, special effects artist/actor/stuntman Tom Savivi, several cast and crew members, and clips from Romero's two hour forty five minute version of Dawn Of The Dead which include some alternate footage not seen on the U.S. theatrical release. All interspersed with scenes from Night Of The Living Dead, Martin, and the Calgon commercial spoof on Fantastic Voyage.
There is also a segment on Two Evil Eyes which reunites Romero and Frumkes. It focuses on a special effects segment detailing on what can go wrong in movie making usually does. Quite effective.
The DVD supplements feature a fascinating audio commentary with director Frumkes, cinematographer Reeves Lehmann, and narrator Nicole Potter, with lots of anecdotes, including a very sad one detailing the lost alternate ending of the original cut of Dawn Of The Dead. There are also seven minutes of deleted footage from the original documentary, plus a twenty minute interview segment from Two Evil Eyes with Adrienne Barbeau, George Romero, and Tom Savini.
Required viewing for future filmakers and, of course, fans of Dawn Of The Dead, George Romero, and Roy Frumkes.
A job well done.
Zzzzzzz..........Boring.................2001-03-18
Im a HUGE fan of Romero's dead trilogy. Especially, Dawn of the Dead (which this movie goes behind the scenes to)...I couldn't WAIT to get my copy of this DVD into my collection, when I finally did I realized I wasted my money. This is more of a documentary on Romero rather than the making of Dawn of the Dead. Which is alright, but it wasn't done very well. I learned only a few interesting facts about Romero and his directing style. The behind the scenes of Dawn of the Dead was *moderately* interesting at best...I was very disapointed at this. And then there was the new footage from 'Two Evil Eyes'.....ZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz........I watched for-I swear-it must have been almost twenty minutes on how they filmed one special effects shot that really wasn't all that special! AND, I didn't even listen to the commentary track which I usually love to do. I just didn't feel like I needed to go to sleep again...
...Trust me, people. Save your money if you are thinking of buying it. IF you run into this movie at the video store and see it's for rent....well, then it might be worth the 3 bucks to watch it once. If I had only rented this movie I *may* have hated it just a *little bit* less. But because I spent much more money to buy this garbage, I'm Irate. The only advantage to owning this movie is if you have insomnia and sleeping pills won't help you.
DVD:
- The Sea
- The Rolling Stones - Just for the Record (Unauthorized)
- Tupac Shakur/New Look
- Prisoners Among Us: Italian-American Identity & World War II
- The Second World War, Vol. 4: Their Finest Hour/Against All Odds
- The Second World War, Vol. 5: The Wehrmacht/The Kriegsmarine
- NASA - 25 Years of Glory Volumes 1-5
- Lindbergh: The Shocking, Turbulent Life of America's Lone Eagle
- What a Blast: Architecture in Motion
- Money Power Respect
DVD
DVD
DVD
And Then There Was One (The True Stories Collection)
Mussorgsky - Boris Godunov
Slaves to the Underground
DVD: Agent Red
Body Feeling - Step 1: Kräftigung and Power