ThinMan : whatever.
fl4g0ndry : This was a fun ride! Loved it! Now I'm going to have to go back and re-watch all of them. ...
BasedScotsman : Tom Hardy* There fixed it for you.
bbbuxxx : Oh God, really? I genuinely thought there was another episode, it's just a place holder un...
greenguy86 : Some answers and more questions. Not holding my breath on a renewal.
Birdsforme : Contains spoilers. Click to show. This film was very well made for a tv film. The points made were that there are worse thin...
grasshopper rex : I have little doubt that there were Nazi sympathizers throughout the war that would have e...
bbbuxxx : Oh God, really? I genuinely thought there was another episode, it's just a place holder un...
Euringer : That is definitely a piece to the puzzle that is often ignored in basic modern history, bu...
grasshopper rex : Not a surrender as such, but a negotiated peace settlement. If Halifax had succeeded Chamb...
Fascinating 1973 film directed by George A. Romero, though unlike his Dawn of the Dead work, I doubt it would appeal to mainstream horror fans.
The backstory is that he showed the finished film to the Church organisation who commissioned it but subsequently refused to sign off on its release - personally, I wonder if it was the finished film or simply the first cut - while some of the editing is stunning, especially the montage sequences, it still feels like he had more work to do with the editing, but what do I know.
The soundtrack and sound effects are excellent - he was a master of sound, often using obscure library music tracks and I just wished they had gone into a little more detail in the closing credits as to source.
I get why people will be disappointed but for Romero fans, obscure 70s horror aficionados and soundtrack heads it’s an hour well spent.