Shot for roughly $114,000 using black-and-white 16mm film, its grainy, documentary-style aesthetic made the violence feel uncomfortably real.
The film is celebrated for its unintentional but powerful social commentary. Released during the height of the and the Vietnam War , the casting of Duane Jones—a Black man—as the heroic lead was revolutionary. Night of the Living Dead (1968)
The film’s bleak conclusion, where the protagonist survives the monsters only to be killed by a "posse" of humans, resonated deeply with an American public reeling from the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. 3. Independent Innovation Shot for roughly $114,000 using black-and-white 16mm film,
Before 1968, "zombies" were typically portrayed as mindless servants controlled by voodoo or scientific experimentation. Romero introduced the : a reanimated corpse driven by a singular, primal hunger for human meat. By removing the "master" and making the threat a mindless, unstoppable force of nature, Romero shifted the horror from external villains to the breakdown of human society. 2. A Mirror to 1960s America unstoppable force of nature