![]() ![]() This is a psychedelic, manically edited, counter-culture romantic comedy about the problematic relationship between a spoiled man-child (Ray Laine) and a professional actress (Judith Ridley). There's Always Vanilla: A rare non-horror work by Romero. ![]() So without further ado, let's get to the movies that are in this set. This might be because that film is still having many rights issues, as told to me by fellow DVD Talk critic Tyler Foster, so it's entirely possible that Arrow wasn't able to jump through that hurdle. Romero's underrated realistic vampire drama/horror Martin isn't in there, it was technically made within the period depicted in the set, even though it was released the same year as Dawn. The good folks at Arrow Video decided to cover this section of Romero's career with a spiffy and attractive box set titled Between Night and Dawn.īefore we get to what's in the set, I have to inform you on what isn't. Whether they all succeeded is another issue, and we'll get to that below. Especially during the ten-year gap between his two defining classics, Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead, he tried to stretch his directing muscles with a variety of interesting projects. ![]() ![]() As much as he was known as a horror director, he had a fairly versatile outlook on his art and was never afraid of trying different styles and tones. Romero (RIP) is known primarily as the father of the zombie genre, and the man responsible for my favorite horror film all time, the original Dawn of the Dead. ![]()
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