Dawn of the Dead (1978)

Dawn of the Dead is an Italian-American from 1978 horror film, directed by George a. Romero. The film is a classic in the subgenre of zombie movies. Dawn of the Dead was a sequel to the film Night of the Living Dead, and was followed by the films Day of the Dead, Land of the Dead, Diary of the Dead and Survival of the Dead. The movie made on the late 1970s for a tree to zombie movies.

The film was turned over a period of four months beginning at the end of 1977, 1978, with a relatively low budget of about $ 500,000. Filming the scenes in the Monroeville Mall in Monroeville, Pennsylvania just happened when that shop was closed, approximately between 11 pm in the evening and 7 am in the morning. Despite the limitations of the film technology from the seventies, the nightly turn times and budgetary constraints, the film was one of the financially most successful horror films. One of the successes lay in responding to the international market. The film was edited and shown in different ways, depending on local expect from the public. The Italian Dario Argento producer stopped in the European adaptation of the movie for example less development of the characters and held a higher rate, in comparison to Romero's version.

In 2004, a remake of the same name directed by Zack Snyder. Many elements of the original version from 1978 were retrieved, including the siege of a shopping mall by zombies. Unlike in the original movie where the zombies are slow and dazed without energy there, the zombies in this film, however, fast and nimble. ==Division Of Roles[ Edit] ==