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City of the Living Dead (1980)

City of the Living Dead (1980)
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This gruesome horror film from cult director Lucio Fulci posits a priest's suicide opening the gateway to Hell, freeing bloodthirsty zombies to roam the town of Dunwich. The main attractions are startlingly explicit special effects by Franco Rufino, including two of the horror genre's most memorable deaths. One involves perennial victim Giovanni Lombardo Radice (also known as John Morghen) having his head run through with a power-drill, and the second is the notorious scene of a woman vomiting up all of her internal organs in a nauseating torrent of blood and guts. Fulci does manage one nice moment of splatter-free horror, as hero Christopher George struggles to free a woman who has been buried alive. As his pick-axe enters the coffin repeatedly, it comes ever closer to her face, causing the audience to wince with each strike. Aside from these scenes, though, Fulci's direction is somewhat plodding, as he substitutes slow pacing and clouds of fog for real suspense. Horror fans will still want to seek this film out, however, if only for the effects work and a familiar cast including Catriona MacColl, Janet Agren, Carlo de Mejo, Antonella Interlenghi, and Daniela Doria. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Christopher George
Director(s):
Lucio Fulci
Format(s):
DVD  |  Blu-ray
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Synopsis of City of the Living Dead

This gruesome horror film from cult director Lucio Fulci posits a priest's suicide opening the gateway to Hell, freeing bloodthirsty zombies to roam the town of Dunwich. The main attractions are startlingly explicit special effects by Franco Rufino, including two of the horror genre's most memorable deaths. One involves perennial victim Giovanni Lombardo Radice (also known as John Morghen) having his head run through with a power-drill, and the second is the notorious scene of a woman vomiting up all of her internal organs in a nauseating torrent of blood and guts. Fulci does manage one nice moment of splatter-free horror, as hero Christopher George struggles to free a woman who has been buried alive. As his pick-axe enters the coffin repeatedly, it comes ever closer to her face, causing the audience to wince with each strike. Aside from these scenes, though, Fulci's direction is somewhat plodding, as he substitutes slow pacing and clouds of fog for real suspense. Horror fans will still want to seek this film out, however, if only for the effects work and a familiar cast including Catriona MacColl, Janet Agren, Carlo de Mejo, Antonella Interlenghi, and Daniela Doria. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
93 mins

Complete Cast of City of the Living Dead


Director(s):
Lucio Fulci
Writer(s):
Dardano SacchettiLucio Fulci
Producer(s):
Robert Warner
Categories:
ForeignHorror
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Member Reviews
 
Chris W.

While this is not Fulci's best horror movie, it still has what you'd expect from his Italian horror flicks. Some weird reactions by folks, not-so great acting, not the best dubbing, and some heavy gore. The zombies in this flick love to put the squeeze on the back of people's heads - haha. Not sure what Michael is talking about with no zombies being in the movie, but I think he may be used to watching Return/Night/Dawn/Land/whatever of the Living Dead where there's hundreds of zombies. There's only a couple of zombies throughout most the movie and they're not even really shown once they become zombies. The last 20 minutes of the movie shows a bunch of zombies.

Yes   |   No

 
Sabrina M.

I really enjoyed this movie. A few very classic gross scenes in it. It was slow at times, but I expected that.

Yes   |   No

 
Lindsay C.

Overall I enjoyed this movie. It is actually one of my favorite Fulci films. The acting may not be the best and the plot may be a bit silly and filled with holes, but the gore cannot be beat. There are a couple of infamous scenes in this movie, including one where a young woman vomits up her own digestive system, that even I had a hard time watching. I generally don't find Fulci's films scary, but this one had more than it's share of creepy moments. The atmosphere was great for creating a sense of fear and doom. I would highly recommend this film if you want over-the-top gore.

Yes   |   No

 
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