

Shouldn't this have been Twilight of the Dead? (I felt the same way about the third installment of this four-movie series, Day of the Dead.) The title, although appropriate, breaks the cycle. There's a sense that Romero has run out of ideas and is recycling. In a strange way, the film feels like a hybrid of last year's Dawn of the Dead remake crossed with Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later.

The zombies are creepier looking than in the past, and the gore is more hard-core, but the story still boils down to the same old, same old: humans running away from hoards of slow-moving zombies. Romero may have been the originator of the modern zombie movie, but, at least with Land of the Dead, he hasn't done much to refine it.
