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‘The Fly II’ Remains Malformed & Misunderstood 35 Years Later

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The Fly II Acid Vomit Melted Face

The horror genre is one that frequently insists upon sequels and franchises, even when they’re woefully misguided endeavors. There are too many sequels that are set up to fail and seem financially driven and creatively bankrupt, whether it’s Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2, The Rage: Carrie 2, or American Psycho II: All American Girl. However, it’s always electric when one of these sequels does something special, different, and audiences are left with a Psycho II or The Exorcist III scenario on their hands. The Fly II is a horror sequel that was largely written off the moment that it was announced, sans David Cronenberg, even if its existence makes sense. The Fly II isn’t superior to its predecessor, but it does excel in many areas that are absent in the original. It brings something new to the table and marks a unique voice in body horror that still holds up 35 years after its overlooked original release.

The Fly II is the directorial debut of Chris Walas, the Academy Award-winning make-up and effects artist who’s not only responsible for the first Fly’s effects, but also some of cinema’s most memorable effects and creations like the face-melting from Raiders of the Lost Ark, Naked Lunch’s creatures, the Gremlins, and the special effect makeup in the Tales from the Crypt body-swapping classic, “The Switch,” with William Hickey and Arnold Schwarzenegger. He’s a natural choice to take over a Fly sequel in lieu of Cronenberg and getting the opportunity to really let loose, which makes The Fly II an ultimately fascinating sequel that doesn’t at all feel like a soulless cash-grab. It stands on its own merit as Walas works hard to prove himself in this field and he absolutely succeeds, despite any of the specific misgivings in this sequel.

The Fly II begins several months after the original with a harrowing maggot birth scene that echoes Veronica’s dream sequence from the original, albeit real this time. This is such a striking, bold way to begin the movie where Veronica is confined to a Bartok government facility and her Flybaby is thrust into a life where it’s destined to be co-opted and controlled, not loved. This sets The Fly II up for a unique first act with a young Martin Brundle as the sequel examines what Seth Brundle’s plight would have been like as a kid who’s been experimented on his entire life rather than a Goldblum-y scientific genius. The Fly II’s first act more closely resembles Beyond the Black Rainbow, Stranger Things, or something like The Brood, than it does The Fly. This becomes the film’s best and worst quality as it sets out to explore something new instead of just repeating the same beats as its predecessor.

The Fly II Dog

The Fly II’s first act really leans into the innocence, confusion, and tragedy of Martin’s situation. In one sequence, Martin’s only friend – a golden retriever – gets turned into a lab experiment. This scene alone carries tremendous pathos and is more emotional than anything in the original Fly. This also becomes the first opportunity for The Fly II to really show off its special effects and lean into horror, which makes the moment hit even harder. The deleted baboon sequence in the original is horrific, but The Fly II’s golden retriever experiment is infinitely more devastating and moving. Cronenberg’s Fly is hardly void of emotion, but it becomes The Fly II’s secret weapon. It’s smart for the sequel to lean so hard into it during the film’s first act before Martin matures and the movie more or less returns to the originals’ status quo.

Later on, the sequence where Martin sneaks food to his deformed pet and cries over its sheer pain of existing is heartbreaking and unlike anything from its predecessor. It’s only fitting that this tragic loss of innocence is immediately followed with Martin’s transition to adulthood. On that note, Martin spends the following 80 minutes as an adult (and played by Eric Stoltz), but it’s crucial to remember that he’s actually only five years old. Martin looks mature, but his mentality and understanding of the world is still just that of a child. It’s another important distinction between the sequel and the original. The Fly II doesn’t explore this angle as much as it could, but it still casts a darkness over everything that follows. In doing so, it’s almost like Walas puts The Fly and Big in two telepods and that The Fly II is the mutated synthesis of them both. 

The age-old question with sequels like The Fly II frequently boils down to: is it good, or is it just gross? Fortunately, The Fly II has far more going for it than simply some disgusting set pieces that rival those from its predecessor. That being said, there are some wonderfully uncomfortable effects showcases throughout this sequel. The movie’s most memorable moments involve a head that dissolves from Martin’s avid vomit, a skull that’s crushed by an elevator, and Martin’s cocoon (which is really something special that simultaneously looks like it’s out of The Blob and Alien). However, the hideous results of Martin’s dog and Bartok’s transformation post-telepod are also proper nightmare fuel. 

The Fly II MartinFly Cocoon

The final version of “Martinfly” is also such a remarkable creation that’s void of any visible humanity and resembles Pumpkinhead and a Gremlin’s lovechild. Curiously, Walas on the film’s commentary talks about intentionally avoiding going too far in this department and just mimicking Cronenberg’s original. It does feel like there’s restraint here so that when these disturbing practical effects are turned to they stand out even more, but it’s by no means a pacified film, despite some of Walas’ claims. Further to this point, The Fly II eases its audience into this body horror ordeal, but even Martin’s initial “infection” is incredibly gross. It sets the tone for what’s to come and Martin’s final transformation does look genuinely awful and still original from the separately-disgusting Brundlefly from the original movie. 

It’s impressively not until 47 minutes into the movie – nearly half-way in – that Martin starts to show symptoms and the movie leans into the body horror elements of the original. That being said, it’s hard to believe that it’s the triggering of Martin’s fly symptoms that usher in a broad hamminess. This may even be intentional on the film’s part. The first-half of The Fly II presents itself as an emotional character-driven drama that represents Martin’s humanity, all before it descends into schlocky horror that reflects Martin’s overbearing fly genes. 

The Fly II’s first act is fascinated with the theme of those who are forced to grow up too quickly and tasked with something before they’re ready. There are some clear parallels here with director, Chris Walas, who’s on his first directorial job. The film is repeatedly a litmus test for whether Walas is ready for this responsibility or if he’s been pushed into this role too soon. It’s a compelling framework to view the movie, even if this angle gets progressively dropped once Martin becomes an adult. Walas’ promotion from special effects and make-up savant to director feels a lot like Stan Winston’s brief shift towards directing. This transition typically doesn’t work and there are far more stories of failure than success. 

The Fly II MartinFly Monster

Nevertheless, Walas’ work on The Fly II is an excellent debut feature that’s not dissimilar to Winston’s first feature film, Pumpkinhead. Curiously, both effects men-turned-director fumble and retreat after their second films, The Vagrant in Walas’ case and A Gnome Named Gnorm for Winston. The Vagrant has a little more juice, even if it’s a deeply odd thriller that frequently verges on comical parody. It’s also worth pointing out that The Fly II’s strict release schedule meant that it was released between Cronenberg’s Dead Ringers and Naked Lunch, both of which are formative films for the director. It’d be a shame to think about either of those movies not happening because of Cronenberg’s commitment to a Fly sequel and repeating his own tricks.

Performance is another important area to break down and Cronenberg’s Fly wouldn’t have connected with nearly as many people without Jeff Goldblum’s unhinged, fearless work as Seth Brundle (who makes a cameo in the movie through deleted scenes from The Fly that are treated like “new” footage, which is actually a clever conceit). Eric Stoltz is no Jeff Goldblum, but he still does great work here and makes this performance his own. Stoltz wisely doesn’t play Martin like a carbon copy of Seth, which wouldn’t have felt right in the first place. It’s better that Stoltz curates his own character and plays to his own unique talents as an actor rather than emulating someone else (and likely failing at the attempt). This is a great early example of what Stoltz can do, but it’s worth noting that the Martin Brundle role was originally offered to Keanu Reeves (with Josh Brolin and Vincent D’Onofrio also auditioning), which could have been fascinating. Neither actor had a ton of horror experience at this point, with Reeves coming off of productions like Permanent Record and Dangerous Liaisons. Curiously, The Fly II came out a week after Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, which would have been a staggering double-feature if Reeves had taken the role instead of Stoltz.

Daphne Zuniga’s Beth Logan is also the film’s beating heart, who pumps in tandem with Martin. Their fly-fish meet-cute is a really effective introduction that never feels too on-the-nose and is a testament to The Fly II’s screenplay, which has writing credits by Mick Garris, Frank Darabont, and Ken and Jim Wheat. The script is actually full of parallels and callbacks that provide a malformed symmetry to the movie in the best way possible, like Martin’s helmet from his childhood that dispenses water and the projectile vomit that comes out of Martinfly as an adult. Even the transformed dog comes back in a justified way that makes its presence in the first act resonate more strongly. At its best moments, The Fly II operates like a sick love triangle, albeit one that’s between Martin, Beth, and Seth Brundle’s science. It’s Martin’s genetics that pull him away from this humble chance at normalcy.

The Fly II Bartok Monster

The Fly II begins as a more delicate character-driven chamber piece, but the final 15 minutes basically turn the sequel into an action film in the vein of Alien or Predator. Government officials hunt down the monstrous Martinfly with automatic weapons, all while he picks them off one by one. Some of the film’s biggest moments get saved for this concluding massacre. It culminates in an ending that’s actually much darker than Cronenberg’s original. Walas explicitly cites Tod Browning’s Freaks as an influence and there’s no hiding it (along with I Think You Should Leave, if that had existed in the ‘80s). Both conclusions really push audiences out of their comfort zones in the best ways possible. There was also a planned alternate ending, which is enlightening for completely different reasons, but Walas ultimately sticks with the better conclusion. In it, Martin’s changed eye color indicates that Bartok is now Martin and that a switch has taken place. It’s almost like Walas tries to inject some of Cronenberg’s Scanners into The Fly at the very last minute. The Fly II’s theatrical ending doesn’t provide a clear look at Martin’s eyes, but this alternate version creates ambiguity over who has truly survived. It’s also able to set up another potential sequel, which of course never happened.

Alternatively, there are two other Fly sequels to draw inspiration and learn from – 1959’s Return of the Fly and Curse of the Fly from 1965. The original Fly trilogy from the ‘50s and ‘60s is certainly a product of its time and despite its minor flaws, Walas’ sequel easily trumps them. Walas’ sequel could have easily copied and pulled from these movies, yet it opts for something very different, albeit with some of the same DNA. Return of the Fly and The Fly II both focus on the offspring of the previous film’s protagonist, but Return of the Fly is set 15 years later, rather than mere months, like in The Fly II. Curse of the Fly is oddly more interested in the commercial commodification of telepods for international travel purposes. It’s more indebted to sci-fi than horror. The Fly II still has hints of what Brundle’s technology could do for the betterment of society, but they’re largely after-thoughts to the character study that plays out with Martin. That being said, there’s no Misfits song that’s inspired by Walas’ sequel.

On a financial level, The Fly II was technically a success, even if it’s remembered as a complete flop. The Fly II’s budget was allegedly just shy of $7 million dollars (which was less than that of the original), which it certainly made back with its worldwide gross of $38.9 million. This still pales in comparison to the original’s worldwide gross of over $60 million. A third film would have likely continued to make a profit, but the writing seemed to be on the wall in terms of The Fly’s diminishing returns as a horror franchise. However, it’s still a little surprising that this series didn’t live on through direct-to-video sequels like Species or Wrong Turn where it could have coasted for years. Chris Walas creates something imperfect, but special, with The Fly II that doesn’t deserve to be completely forgotten or dismissed with the many pointless horror sequels. 35 years later, it’s easier to view The Fly II outside of its predecessor’s shadow and appreciate its wild swings. The Fly II might leave some horror fans annoyed, but it shouldn’t be swatted away.

Daniel Kurland is a freelance writer, comedian, and critic, whose work can be read on Splitsider, Bloody Disgusting, Den of Geek, ScreenRant, and across the Internet. Daniel knows that "Psycho II" is better than the original and that the last season of "The X-Files" doesn't deserve the bile that it conjures. If you want a drink thrown in your face, talk to him about "Silent Night, Deadly Night Part II," but he'll always happily talk about the "Puppet Master" franchise. The owls are not what they seem.

Editorials

No More Room in Hell: ‘Dawn of the Dead’ Remains a Masterpiece 45 Years Later

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Dawn of the Dead Twilight of the Dead

Red.

Vivid. Shaggy. The image is bright and engaging but suffocating too. The frame is papered with the color and, indeed, foreshadows the bloody palette from which the remainder of the film’s runtime will be painted. Rather than a betrayal of what’s to come, the domineering shade foretells the imminent delivery of a new world, birthed from the remains of what came before: a new dawn.

The sun first crested on Monroeville Mall’s legions of the lumbering undead in April of 1979 in the US with Dawn of the Dead (1978), shepherding George A. Romero’s bitingly satirical, deeply unsettling, and grossly gore-fueled vision of consumerist America into the public consciousness and forever warping the DNA of genre entertainment. It is this glistening sunrise that went on to usher forth a day, a land and eventually an empire of Romero’s own manufacture, solidifying the ideas he had begun to explore in Night of the Living Dead (1968) and introducing concepts and themes that would go on to inform his series of resurrection sagas all the way through 2009’s Survival of the Dead.

Night of the Living Dead commenced Romero’s sprawling chronicles by not only redefining its central monster for genre enthusiasts the world over, but expanding the creative and emotional possibilities of what the flesh-hungry undead could metaphorically represent. Offering a microcosmic perspective of society, encapsulated in a small country farmhouse by way of a collective of disparate individuals of differing race, sex, class, and privilege, Night asks its viewers to consider the practical and emotional rituals modern society assigns to death.

A decade would come and go before Romero again returned to the damned world of the animated deceased with Dawn of the Dead, a film which follows the logical progression of a crumbling America attempting to quell a threat that they are neither prepared for or able to understand en masse. Where Night leaves viewers in the black and white fog of moral dysphoria, Dawn repositions its decaying humanistic queries to the bright light of day, drawing its events with the vital colors that paint the sunrise sky.

Dominant. Textured. Virile. Red. Everything’s red.

So it is that Dawn of the Dead begins.

The red reveals itself as the textured trappings of a wall, which in turn stands adjacent to a newsroom that is in complete and total disarray. Staffers bustle about, shoving hastily scribed documents into the hands of those meant to communicate crucial information to the masses, simultaneously questioning their resolve- and their sanity- as their eyes quickly scan the preposterous copy. More interesting still is the dichotomy in the space between those that have chosen to flee and those that remain steadfast in their resolve to stay put and keep the cameras rolling.

George A. Romero’s second expedition into the burgeoning world of the walking dead roots itself in the public domain of mounting misinformation. While the film finds sanctuary inside the confines of an abandoned shopping mall, it is the televisions humming in the background, the exasperated pundits arguing in the periphery, and the devastating updates delivered by exhausted scientists that form the somewhat impersonal tapestry which forms the backdrop of Dawn, not all that dissimilar from the backwater hunters making their way jovially across the countryside in Night.

Romero trades out a small rural farmhouse for the sprawling square footage of retail Mecca in Dawn, transposing his societal allegories about race, class, religion, and sex to the kind of escalator laden, multi-story shopping center that would go on to redefine consumerism in the 1970s all the way through to the new millennium. Where Night of the Living Dead faced the realities of hardheaded convictions about the pageantries of death and the self-imposed importance placed on control and leadership in every functioning facet of a bigotry-infused, patriarchal society, Dawn burrows ever deeper into the psyche behind the “American Dream” as the world shambles ever closer to its ghastly fate.

Four people find safe harbor in the Monroeville Mall, working together to clear the place of unwanted, flesh-hungry guests and redistribute its seemingly limitless resources. Unlike Night, Dawn finds its still-breathing cast members cooperating as a unit, repositioning semi-trucks, clearing the complex of its rotting inhabitants, and bringing the comforts of home to their storage space converted living room.

Ken Foree is Peter and Scott Reiniger is Roger, two police officers turned deserters who saw an opportunity to escape not only the clutches of the ravenous rotting wretches but a chance to evade the disintegrating moral landscape of increasingly destabilizing civilization. They initially meet amongst the chaos of a police raid on a low-income housing building as Roger attempts to reconcile his duty to uphold the law against the blatant racism and anti-humanitarianism exhibited by his fellow supposed protectors of the peace.

Peter is black and Roger is white. Roger’s response to both the human perpetrated and otherworldly horrors of the first act are not dissimilar from Judith O’Dea’s Barbra’s more internalized reactions in Night of the Living Dead. Unlike Duane Jones’ Ben in Night however, Peter is able to snap his counterpart out of his unnerved detachment, offering a racially cognizant world-weariness that allows Roger to sift through the remains of his broken worldview and find fresh purpose in the act of survival. One aged priest hobbling through the wreckage summarizes this complicated perspective best, saying, “when the dead walk, señores, we must stop the killing or lose the war.” It’s a statement that both summarizes humanity’s last desperate grasp at survival while prophesying the species’ imminent and perhaps inevitable doom.

“When there’s no more room in hell,” Peter says sometime later while overlooking the mall’s flesh-hungry occupants, “the dead will walk the earth.” Told to him by his grandfather who had been a priest in Trinidad, Peter’s words echo with mysticism and truth. Civil society has imploded and the path to its inevitable destruction is cobbled together by the sins of its players, each transgression regurgitated through the actions of those who have managed to forge ahead. Like Night of the Living Dead before it, the characters here offer windows into the various perspectives which comprise the American consciousness and how each toxic or progressive viewpoint factors into both the disintegration and proliferation of the other.

In short time, Peter and Roger meet up with Fran and Stephen. Played by Gaylen Ross and David Emge respectively, the two represent the kind of fledgling family unit that the guiding principles of the “American Dream” might demand be protected at all costs. Still, their romance is foundationally unsound, built for and by a world that traded in comfort and order, unable to weather the harsh conditions and ideological challenges that the apocalypse carries with it. Peter and Roger may serve as the unofficial protectors of this co-dependent vestige of their bygone world, but it is clear from the start that what they seek to shelter is more hollow than whole.

Dawn of the Dead mines this emotional chasm as the characters go through the motions of a life. Initially, there’s fun to be had in their inexhaustible shopping spree. Trying on clothes, sampling snacks, and snagging furniture for their new homestead atop the market center keeps them occupied and, more importantly, entertained. But over time that sense of enthusiasm disintegrates amongst the empty calories inherent in a retail feast. Their sense of self-worth so wrapped up in the various things they seek to collect, keep, and consume reveals itself to be no more meaningful than the novelties society has trained them to crave with such fervent desperation in the first place.

Alongside the consumerist commentary, Romero explores the interpersonal, patriarchal dynamics that dominate the dying world around the core characters. Peter, Roger, and Stephen discuss Fran’s pregnancy as though her and the baby’s fate were theirs to decide. Later, Roger assists Stephen in planning a marriage proposal that Fran is clearly uninterested in. As the film progresses, Stephen slowly realizes that Fran is not his property and the antiquated values tied to her relationship with Stephen become damningly clear to Fran. Their survival is secured in the home they have made for themselves, but, as is made apparent from a somber scene where Stephen and Fran share a bed together, the couple’s once connected sense of shared meaning and partnership is yet another casualty of the world’s untimely expiration.

Alternatively, the relationship between Peter and Roger is a genuine one, displaying the power of platonic love between two men who otherwise seem indifferent to emotional connection. Regardless of how much Peter strives to keep Roger’s head above emotional water, Roger’s carelessness and tendency to give into his psychological consternation lands him incapacitated with a corrosive bite that will inevitably claim his life. This culminates in the film’s most poignant moment as Roger wistfully requests that Peter stay with him to make sure he doesn’t come back. He will try not to, Roger promises and repeats, both men knowing full well that no amount of trying will stop what is undoubtedly going to come.

The unavoidable truth of the situation is, in many ways, the underlying threat of Dawn of the Dead, resulting in a series of events that never feels safe or directional. Even at its most benign, when the characters allow themselves whatever reprieve might be available to them, the instability and ever-gnawing threat of devastation always lingers in the shadows. The zombie menace is the impetus for their dying world, but it is not the sole perpetrator of the human race’s undoing.

So it is that a nomadic group of opportunist marauders destroys in minutes what Peter, Roger, Stephen, and Fran took months to build. Unable to resist his own bruised ego, Stephen engages the mad gang in arms, sealing the fate of their mall made home and further solidifying the ever-weakening fragility that accompanies entrusting others with one’s own livelihood. Now the only two left, Peter and Fran attempt to make peace with the place and each other, fighting not for their creature comforts, but for their continued existence.

Having learned to fly the helicopter against Stephen’s consistently selfish wishes, Fran heads toward the roof. Peter, on the other hand, experiences a crisis of conscience, questioning the purpose and value of the life he has fought so hard for. However, when the end is staring him dead in the eyes, he chooses life and triumphantly makes his way through the crowd of grasping appendages and snapping jaws to the helicopter. It is only when the adrenaline fades and the monotonous hum of the helicopter blades overtakes the dull roar of moaning that Fran and Peter realize there is nowhere to go and little hope for any semblance of a meaningful escape.

The ending in some ways reminds of a scene that occurred much earlier in the film, wherein a fellow traveler converses with Stephen just before he leaves the news station with Fran, Peter, and Roger. Stephen asks where the man is headed. The man says that he and his travel mates are going to try and make it to the island. When Stephen asks which island specifically, the man simply replies: “any island.”

The answer, and indeed the ending itself, suggests that perhaps the idea of a destination is enough. Maybe that’s all life really is – a quest for the idea of what one believes one wants out of it. Regardless, the harsh realities of that sentiment come into sharp focus when the constructs of society are unceremoniously stripped away.

George A. Romero was an urgent filmmaker. Everything from his thematic messaging to his guerilla-style execution begat an imperative weight to what he had to say about our culture, our country, and our shared consequences. And nowhere was this tenor of priority more heightened, sermonic, and damning than in his career-spanning series of undead epics, encapsulated perfectly in Dawn of the Dead.

Dawn was neither the beginning nor the end of Romero’s exploration of humanity’s unfolding de-evolution, tracking both the degradation of the world of people and the germinating civilization of the not-so-recently deceased. Day of the Dead (1985) carried this idea forward, introducing Bub and the concept of a trained or even familiar zombie. Land of the Dead (2005) stretched this even further, showcasing an all-zombie community with shared ideals and goals that extended to the pages of George A. Romero’s graphic novel Empire of the Dead. Empire went on to further examine these phenomena as well as the sway other supernatural forces might hold in a new world fresh with decay and the power struggles that will always arise around “intelligent” life’s quest for privilege and interpersonal sway.

Diary of the Dead (2007) and Survival of the Dead (2009) repackage and repurpose much of Romero’s ideological concerns in more simple and overt ways, leveraging found footage in the former as both a cost-saving means of creation and a vehicle to deliver a raw, unfiltered message to a modern audience. Survival wraps Romero’s ideas in an oddball western melodrama that celebrates the filmmaker’s idiosyncratic voice and ideas while staying true to the exploration of humanity that once resided in the rotting flesh of the mobile corpses at the top of the new world food chain. His final film, Survival of the Dead ensured that, to the last, Romero was using his platform and ideas to explore the many different facets of genre storytelling and how his vision might be able to be manipulated to meet the demands of multiple subgenres and audiences.

Still, it was with Dawn that the master storyteller began to dive deeper into the meaning behind humanity’s decline and the parallel rise of zombie-kind, suggesting that a lack of foresight and willingness to accept and grow with change may lie at the feet of humanity’s undoing. Big, sweeping, and yet strikingly intimate and introspective, Dawn of the Dead proved unequivocally that Romero’s grand exercise in undead cinema was not only deserving of multiple chapters and iterations, but required them to be properly examined and explored.

What starts with red ends in the pleasant perusal of the mall’s various offerings accompanied by peppy, if not slightly repetitive, elevator-style music. The birth of a new world is a tumultuous process, accompanied by the painful ejection of what had come before. However, when all is said and done, it is the small things that bring comfort, even at the end of the world. So it is that the zombies shop – or, at least, they attempt to.

With that, a new dawn arises. While the ecosystem of consumerism that drove and defined much of America’s economic and social strata might be an artifact of a bygone era in the world of Romero’s dead series, many of the consumers who powered that system remain vertical (even if they stopped breathing and developed a healthy appetite for fresh flesh). The mall’s relevance is no longer tied to its contents but to the feeling those items once had the ability to affect. An important lesson to be sure, but, regrettably, one too obtuse for either the dead or the undead to fully comprehend.

Like the sleep-deprived Fran pressing her head against the strikingly scarlet shag as she seeks sojourn from the mayhem of the world around her, Dawn of the Dead stumbles to life with a jolt and never finds much solace in its goings on, highlighting the inescapable and very human truths that resonate just as strongly today as they did upon the film’s release. George A. Romero was an urgent filmmaker, it’s true, and that urgency permeated everything he created, however the quality was rarely more evident than it was in his ghoul-led operatics. Vibrant, violent, and vital, it is in that festering world of flesh-starved fiends that he was able to explore the deepest channels of the human condition and reflect its best and worst attributes back to his audience with humor, horror, and heartbreak.

Beautiful. Terrifying. Engrossing.

Red.

Like a sunrise, its fire illuminating the sky and making way for something altogether new. Whether we like it or not may be relevant to us, but not to the sun. Not to the sky. A new sun will always dawn. Whether humanity has a place in its light is entirely up to them.

Through Romero’s uniquely attuned lens, it is the dead’s world, after all, we’re just living in it.

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