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Every zombie story made in the last half century walks through the same door. The shuffling dead, the barricaded survivors, the bite that dooms you, the headshot that saves you, the radio that stops helping: all of it comes from a farmhouse outside Pittsburgh in 1968. What most of those stories leave on the other side of that door is the reason George A. Romero built it. He was never particularly interested in the dead. He was interested in what the living do to each other once the excuse arrives.
Romero died nine years ago today, on July 16, 2017, at 77, after what his family described as a brief and aggressive fight with lung cancer, listening to the score of The Quiet Man with his wife and daughter beside him. It is a gentle ending for a man whose films argued, over and over, that gentleness is the first thing a society throws overboard.
A $114,000 Film That Refused to Behave
Night of the Living Dead was made by a Pittsburgh commercial production company for roughly $114,000, in black and white, with local actors and borrowed farmland. Nothing about it was supposed to matter. Nearly everything about it did, and the strangest part is how much of its power arrived by accident.
Romero always maintained that the role of Ben was not written for a Black actor and that Duane Jones was simply the best performer who auditioned. Nobody rewrote the script around the casting. Then history walked in anyway. Romero told NPR that he and his partners heard about Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination on the radio while driving the finished print to New York to look for a distributor. Months later, audiences watched a capable Black man survive a night of the dead through sheer competence, only to be shot at dawn by a posse of armed white men who look at him and see a target. The film never announces what that means. It just shows the meat hooks and rolls the credits, and the country supplied the rest, a dynamic we’ve dug into at length before.
The Monster Was Never the Point

What Romero understood, earlier and better than anyone, is that a zombie is an empty vessel. It has no plan, no speech, no ideology. Whatever the story is actually about has to come from the people, and Romero kept pointing the camera at people behaving in ways that felt uncomfortably pre-apocalyptic.
Dawn of the Dead in 1978 put four survivors in the Monroeville Mall and let the dead press their faces against the glass, drawn back to the one place that mattered to them in life. It remains the cleanest satirical image in American horror, and crucially, it is also a blast. The consumerism critique lands because the movie around it is generous, funny, and genuinely exciting, something our own writers keep rediscovering decades later. Day of the Dead in 1985 went underground with soldiers and scientists and watched cooperation rot in real time, men with guns bullying men with clipboards while the one glimmer of empathy in the bunker belongs to Bub, a zombie. Land of the Dead in 2005 built Fiddler’s Green, a luxury tower where the wealthy dine comfortably above a collapsing world, confident the trouble outside will respect the lobby.
Romero distrusted armed authority, official expertise wielded as power, wealth that mistakes insulation for safety, and anyone who assumes command simply because they are loudest. His compassion ran the other direction, toward the overlooked and the abandoned, which is also what his non-zombie work keeps circling. Martin gives us a lonely Pennsylvania kid who may or may not be a vampire in a town the economy already killed. The Crazies watches a military containment operation generate more horror than the outbreak it came to contain. Knightriders spends two and a half hours on a motorcycle Renaissance troupe trying to live by a code the world has no use for, and Creepshow, his Stephen King collaboration, proves the moralist could also be a kid with an EC comic and a flashlight.
What the Imitators Keep Leaving Behind

Zombie media has never been bigger, and most of it is a photocopy of a photocopy. The shamblers, the hordes, the safe zones and the bitten loved ones all trace back to Romero, while the anger that animated them quietly gets left at the door. He noticed this himself, and he was not gracious about it, dismissing television’s biggest zombie franchise in a 2013 Big Issue interview as [“just a soap opera with a zombie occasionally.” Harsh, maybe. Also fair. Strip the satire out of a Romero premise and what remains is survival content, endlessly watchable and about nothing.
That is why his films have not aged into museum pieces the way his imitators’ will. Watch Night in 2026 and the posse still looks familiar. Sit down for Dawn and the fluorescent hum of the mall still describes an afternoon you have personally lived. Watch Land and the tower full of comfortable people insisting the collapse is someone else’s problem requires no translation whatsoever. His 1968 debut still returns to theaters because audiences keep finding it current rather than quaint. Nine years after his death, the dead he invented are everywhere. The things he was actually warning us about never left either, and that, more than any ghoul, is why George Romero still gets under the skin. The monsters were the delivery system. We were always the payload.

