The Return of the Living Dead backdrop
The Return of the Living Dead poster

THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD

1985 GB HMDB
April 25, 1985

When two bumbling employees at a medical supply warehouse accidentally release a deadly gas into the air, the vapors cause the dead to rise again as zombies.

Directors

Cast

👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Crew

Production: Tom Fox (Producer)John Daly (Executive Producer)Derek Gibson (Executive Producer)
Screenplay: Dan O'Bannon (Screenplay)John A. Russo (Story)Russell Streiner (Story)Rudy Ricci (Story)
Music: Matt Clifford (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Jules Brenner (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
Frank, caretaker of a funeral home, shows his new assistant strange containers with corpses inside that he claims are real "living dead". The recommendation was not to open them at all, but the two, accidentally, bump into them and the dead, thirsty for human brains, escape. The infection begins to spread, and the intervention of the army with an atomic bomb is needed to restore normality. Certainly a great horror directed by Dan O'Bannon, a "specialist" in the fantastic genre and thrill (he is remembered above all for the screenplay of the splendid "Alien") with a rather simple plot, from a "classic" zombie movie, but special effects and splatter sequences really effective. It's a shame only that O'Bannon decided to introduce some "comic" moments in the film, somewhat out of place. A kind of "comedy" version of Romero's "Zombi".
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Where to Watch

Stream

MGM Plus Amazon Channel MGM Plus Amazon Channel

COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

Gimly

Gimly

7 /10

So. Much. Damn. Fun. The Return of the Living Dead always takes me back to being a teenager. In a good way.

Trash is taking off her clothes again.

Final rating:★★★½ - I really liked it. Would strongly recommend you give it your time.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

7 /10

“Burt” (Clu Gulager) is regaling new boy “Freddy” (Thom Matthews) with spooky tales in their medical supply warehouse and that takes them to the basement where the relics of the last zombie attack were stored in hermetically sealed metal jars. Rather stupidly, they open one and release not just it’s toxic gases but also one of it’s fairly peckish occupants! Fleeing for their very lives, they call in the boss “Frank” (James Karen) who in turn drags in the local funeral director “Ernie” (Don Calfa giving Christopher Lloyd a run for his money) to dispose of their recently acquired evidence. Snag? Well the cremation process creates loads of smoke which is conveniently carried by the rain into the soil of the adjacent graveyard and next thing, yep, the ground is alive with the long dead screaming for their ultimate painkiller - brains! These are shrewd and hungry critters who soon have paramedic and police officers on their menu, but what chance for our not so intrepid group? Especially as they are now accompanied by the hysterical young “Tina” (Beverly Randolph) who was out in the graveyard with her eclectic group of friends and who ran like hell when she was grabbed by something she didn’t want to grab back. It’s end to end stuff this, marrying some quickly paced dialogue with some remarkably decent special effects creating quite a fun horror film that is fairly light on fear but full of loads of comedy antics before the military resort to their ultimate sanction, thanks to “Col. Glover” (Jonathan Terry), and almost certainly make matters even worse for what I assume will be the next instalment.

Reviews provided by TMDB