Two screen legends with ties to the horror genre have passed
away.
Director George A. Romero has left us at 77. Often referred
to as the King of the Zombies or the Godfather of Horror, Romero scared the
world silly with his horror-classic NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD in 1968. With its
creepy black-and-white presentation and creepier atmosphere and performances,
the film re-invented the term “zombie”, and with his clever subtexts on social
issues, brought the horror genre into the legitimate world of cinema; literally
paving the way for future scare-films such as JAWS and THE EXORCIST to be taken
seriously by critics and awards voters. The film would establish the “walking
dead” so firmly that every future film, parody, and TV series would derive,
tribute, or rip-off what Romero created to this day.
His other directing credits included DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978),
DAY OF THE DEAD (1985), THE CRAZIES (1973), MARGIN (1978), CREEPSHOW (1982), MONKEY
SHINES (1988), and LAND OF THE DEAD (2005).
Born George Andrew Romero in the Bronx, he attended Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh. One of his earliest professional works was
directing a segment for TV’s MISTER ROGERS NEIGHBORHOOD, in which Rogers
received a tonsillectomy.
Also passing away; actor Martin Landau at 89. Landau was
already enjoying a lucrative and award-worthy career in TV and film when he was
cast to play the role of an aging, dying, and troubled horror icon Bela Lugosi
in Tim Burton’s ED WOOD in 1994. Basically playing a cranky old man whose best
days were behind him, Landau found a vulnerable side in the nail-tough character,
and he would be awarded an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor that year.
His Oscar for ED WOOD was not his first brush with the
awards circuit. His first Academy nomination came for his role in TUCKER: THE
MAN AND HIS DREAM (1988), and his second would come in 1989 for his work in
CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS. He also had Emmy Award nominations for his work in
TV’s MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE.
Landau made his first film appearance in Alfred Hitchcock’s
classic NORTH BY NORTHWEST (1959). Other notable film roles included CLEOPATRA
(1963), CITY HALL (1996), ROUNDERS (1998), EDtv (1999), THE MAJESTIC (2001),
and CITY OF EMBER (2008). He would re-unite with Tim Burton to provide
voice-work in the stop-motion animated FRANKENWEENIE in 2012. He was also well-known for his work in the TV series SPACE: 1999.
Born in Brooklyn, Landau worked as a cartoonist before auditioning
for the Actors Studio in 1955. He was the head of the Hollywood branch of the
Actors Studio until his death.
*
Romero and Landau may sit on the total opposite of each
other in the horror genre; one created a new mythology behind the camera while
the other portrayed a well-known actor, but they both have several things in
common, beginning with adding extra layers of depth to the films they worked
on. There is a neat irony to be had knowing that these two greats passed away
within hours of each other, and that their two most-known and perhaps best
works were presented in glorious black-and-white, even though they didn’t have
to be. Perhaps somewhere in another place…Bela, George, and Martin are enjoying
a scary laugh in shades of grey, while the rest of us enjoy the color they brought to cinema.
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