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The Crazies poster

THE CRAZIES

1973 US HMDB
March 16, 1973

The military attempts to contain a manmade virus causing death and permanent insanity in those infected, as it overtakes a small Pennsylvania town.

Cast

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Crew

Production: Al Croft (Producer)
Screenplay: George A. Romero (Screenplay)
Music: Bruce Roberts (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: S. William Hinzman (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
A military plane crashes near a rural locality, releasing an experimental bacteriological substance that infiltrates the town's water reserves. Almost all the inhabitants of the area contract a virus that drives them mad and turns them into bloodthirsty killers. The army arrives on the scene to try to control the situation... After his great debut with the legendary "Night of the Living Dead", Romero returns to the theme of urban chaos, of violence that suddenly erupts, contaminating everything and everyone with a fairly decent film halfway between horror and drama. A film with a rather original subject, which alternates some good moments of suspense (like the sequence of the old lady who pierces a soldier with a knitting needle before calmly returning to her knitting) with others excessively slow and which, overall, proves rather heavy and excessively long.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

I suppose this might resonate more now in the wake of the recent global lockdown, but I'm afraid I found it all rather tame and predictable. A devastating virus is accidentally released in a small Pennsylvania town and the military have to contain it before the gradual, but irreversible, insanity it causes spreads throughout the entire country. Responsibility for this onerous task rests firmly with "Col. Peckem" (Lloyd Hollar) as he has to contend with an increasingly fed up local mayor, communications problems and a town that is slowly becoming more and more lawless (and dangerous) by the minute. It doesn't help that, pregnant, local nurse "Judy" (Lane Carroll) has skulked off with fireman husband "David" (Will MacMillan) to try escape the quarantine zone and so he has to try and track them down too. Finally, there is the eccentric "Dr. Watts" (Richard France) who is trying to find a cure for this by sampling the blood of just about everybody/thing he can jab a needle into. This is all your standard contagion horror film, and is produced to a remarkably mediocre standard. The acting is pretty ropey, the script likewise and the denouement is probably the least realistic you could imagine. Taken with your tongue in your cheek, it might raise a smile or two as the stupefied locals take on more zombified (and super-human) strengths, but this is just a rehash of some more charismatically cast Hammer style films without the slightest sense of peril. It does reiterate the oft presented position that the US Military is great at starting problems but hopeless at solving them, but I'm not sure that's what George A. Romero was looking for when he created this rather feeble effort. I saw it on a big screen just last week and I made it through to the end. I won't bother with it again.

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