"Keep The Romero Zombie Alive" : Daughter of George Romero Describes Her New Film Queens Of The Dead
Teasing her forthcoming zombie flick Queens Of The Dead, Tina Romero, the daughter of famous director George Romero—best known for his films including Night of the Living Dead, Season of the Witch, and Dawn of the Dead, Though Tina Romero has formerly directed two short films and an episode of the TV series Flicker, Queens of the Dead will be her debut feature picture.
Romero talks about Queens Of The Dead with Fangoria. Making her film, Romero felt a "responsibility to take the torch and keep the Romero zombie alive". Still, the director wanted to forge her own identity—one different from that of her father. Romero says, "takes place over one night," while talking about the plot of Queens of the Dead and notes a "motley crew of character" who have to decide whether they try to survive the night or leave their town. Please find the complete quotation below:
Though that's okay, queens of the dead will not be like night of the living dead.
Among the most well-known horror movies ever made, George Romero created Night of the Living Dead. Though its black-and- white technique and cheap budget call for a vintage low-budget horror B picture, the film is Its restrictions make the movie more savage and a cult classic Zombie Movie, therefore confirming Romero's prior work as actual masterpieces in horror.
It will almost be impossible for Queens of the Dead to have the same freshness that Night of the Living Dead had in the late sixties almost sixty years later. To bring current zombie clichés to life in a mini-apocalypse, Queens of the Living Dead seems to be trying to twist them for a new generation of survivors, or "non-fighters," as Romero calls it. Set in a "retired drag queen," it
Acolyte: An Additional Chapter
Set in the Star Wars universe during the later stages of the High Republic Era, the Acolyte shows both the Galactic Republic and the Jedi in their most potent state. Examining several crimes, this sci-fi thriller sees a former Padawan meet her former Jedi Master as they investigate occurrences all pointing to darkness emerging from beneath the surface poised to bring about the annihilation of the High Republic.
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The arrival of the Queens
Along with establishing myself and my own viewpoint as a filmmaker, my father's zombies always represented what was occurring in the world and I almost feel a responsibility to protect, appreciate, and give homage to it. It isn't like his. My voice.
It takes place at a large warehouse party in Bushwick at the start of the dead rising. Her main act has quit, so she has to call a friend—a retired drag queen—to revive his drag and save the evening. Our party organizer is having problems as well. And it turns out to be an evening of multiple resurrections. Our varied group of individuals ends up in a Bushwick nightclub and have to determine "Do we leave this place or board up the place?" They had to brave the evening. Deep down it's about a non-fighting group learning survival techniques.
Within the horror movie genre, fast zombies offer an even more lethal threat than their slow-moving, lethargic counterparts.
Under direction by a woman, Queens of the Dead will likewise differ from its forebears. Romero will offer a novel viewpoint on the Zombie Movie in this sense as the male look behind the scenes and in terms of the characters picked still rules the subgenre. Queens of the Dead will find uniqueness in including these fresh ideas into the zombie subgenre, even if it might not seem as innovative as the first Romero zombie movie.
Source: Fangoria