Dawn of the Dead (1978)

Movie · 1978 · Horror, Science Fiction · 2h 7m · NR · English

Curator score: 7.9/10 (323.3K ratings)

When there’s no more room in HELL, the dead will walk the EARTH!

Overview

During an ever-growing epidemic of zombies that have risen from the dead, two Philadelphia SWAT team members, a traffic reporter, and his television-executive girlfriend seek refuge in a secluded shopping mall.

Ratings

Director

George A. Romero

Production

Dawn Associates, Laurel Entertainment

Cast

David Emge, Ken Foree, Scott H. Reiniger, Gaylen Ross, David Crawford, David Early, Richard France, Howard Smith, Daniel Dietrich, Fred Baker, James A. Baffico, Rod Stouffer, Jese Del Gre, Clayton McKinnon, John Rice, Ted Bank, Randy Kovitz, Patrick McCloskey, Joseph Pilato, Pasquale Buba

Curator Review

Verdict

A landmark zombie film that blends relentless gore, social satire, and eerie deadpan humor with remarkable control. Its mall setting turns consumer culture into both playground and prison, and the film’s scale, effects, and atmosphere still feel influential and sharp.

Best for

  • horror fans
  • zombie movie fans
  • viewers interested in social satire
  • fans of practical effects and makeup
  • 70s genre cinema

Skip if

  • you want fast, modern pacing throughout
  • you dislike graphic gore
  • you prefer subtle horror over overt splatter
  • you want a purely action-driven apocalypse movie

Overview

Dawn of the Dead is one of the defining horror films of its era because it understands that the apocalypse is not just about survival, but about habit. Romero turns a shopping mall into a grotesque mirror of consumer desire, where the dead drift through commerce as if it were instinct. That idea gives the film a bite that outlasts its shocks.

Worth noting

It is also a remarkably entertaining siege movie. The characters settle into a strange, almost playful rhythm inside the mall before the situation curdles, and that contrast is part of the film’s power. The practical effects are legendary, but the movie’s real strength is how patiently it builds dread, boredom, and absurdity into the same experience.

Bottom line

Some viewers will find the pacing uneven by modern standards, especially once the mall becomes a kind of false paradise. But that stretch is the point, and it makes the violence hit harder when the illusion breaks. If you want horror with ideas, texture, and a lasting cultural footprint, this is essential viewing.

Top Letterboxd reviews

FilmApe (5★) · 3468 likes

Things I would do differently. 1. Remove the food from the freezer where they put the bodies. 2. Build the wall out of something stronger than cardboard. 3. Close and seriously board up the doors behind the built wall. 4. Seduce Francine away from Flyboy. 5. Take all the guns out of the gun store. 6. Never take off the fur coat. 7. Eat a whole ton of cheese.

Casey Malone (4.5★) · 2568 likes

Top 5 Ideas in Film History: 5. Rocky, But He Wins This Time4. Putting Billy Dee Williams in Star Wars3. Sequential Images Creating the Illusion of Movement2. Setting a Zombie Movie in a Mall as Simultaneous Wish Fulfillment AND Sharp Commentary on American Consumerism, Thus Defining an Entire Genre For 40 Plus Years1. Jaws

Will Menaker (4.5★) · 2244 likes

I always hate it when Roger gets bit after leaving his bag in one of the the trucks they're moving, because up until then it seems like they were doing great and having about as much fun as one can during the apocalypse, just running around with your friends playing with guns, looting shit, driving a Volkswagen hatchback around inside a mall with no *real* danger. Basically the funnest shit you could do with your friends with zero consequences. However,… more I always hate it when Roger gets bit after leaving his bag in one of the the trucks they're moving, because up until then it seems like they were doing great and having about as much fun as one can during the apocalypse, just running around with your friends playing with guns, looting shit, driving a Volkswagen hatchback around inside a mall with no *real* danger. Basically the funnest shit you could do with your friends with zero consequences. However,… more

Justy · 1368 likes

I’ll never understand why that dude had to check his blood pressure that bad

Ian West (5★) · 1259 likes

Legendary anyway you slice it. I always get a chuckle at the slow and boring critique of this movie... this opens with chaos before spit-firing into more chaos... then the safe confines of the mall take over as three folks with nothing suddenly have everything... and that’s where the supposed ‘slow and boring’ comes in, but that’s the point. It’s one hell of a choice by Romero to echo the mundane... Pretty sure we can all relate to that excruciating monotony… more

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Topics

zombie horror, satirical horror, apocalyptic thriller, practical effects, 70s horror, consumer culture, siege narrative, gore, cult classic, social commentary

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