Our Day Of The Dead 90S Scary Movie Halloween Horror Movie Quilt Blanket is the ideal piece of art to complement your Halloween decorations. Prints may differ slightly from the example displayed. The big-scale artwork is printed on soft fleece fabric and features characters from some of your favorite horror films from the 1990s, like A Nightmare on Elm Street, Scream, and Willow, among others! It’s also light enough to serve as a toss blanket!
Day Of The Dead 90S Scary Movie Halloween Horror Movie Quilt Blanket Description
Day Of The Dead 90S Scary Movie Halloween Horror Movie Quilt Blanket Information
Brand | Drama Shirt |
Style | Quilt and Fleece Blanket |
Made of | Fabrics like velboa and sherpa |
Sizes | Various sizes are available to accommodate a wide range of bed sizes and applications. |
Care Guidelines |
To keep its color and keep it from shedding, follow the instructions. |
Day Of The Dead 90S Scary Movie Halloween Horror Movie
Day of the Dead is a 1985 American post-apocalyptic zombie horror film written, directed, and produced by George A. Romero. The third installment in Romero’s Night of the Living Dead series, it stars Lori Cardille, Terry Alexander, Joseph Pilato, Jarlath Conroy, and Richard Liberty as survivors of a zombie apocalypse who have taken refuge in an underground bunker in Florida, where they must determine the outcome of humanity’s conflict with the undead horde. The film is a “tragedy about how a lack of human contact generates chaos and collapse even in this little pie slice of civilization,” according to Romero.
Work on Day of the Dead started soon after the release of the previous film in the series, Dawn of the Dead (1978), but was put on hold while Romero took on other projects. It was created as part of a three-film arrangement with the film’s distributor, United Film Distribution Company (UFDC); Romero chose to make the other two movies in the pact, Knightriders (1981) and Creepshow (1982), first. Although Romero was given final cut privilege, the screenplay was rewritten several times due to UFDC’s concerns that Romero’s ambitious original vision, which he described as “the Gone with the Wind of zombie films,” would need to be shot with the intention of receiving an R rating from the Motion Picture Association of America to ensure its commercial viability.
Romero chose to make the film on a lower budget and release it without a rating. Day of the Dead was shot in the autumn of 1984, including above-ground shots at Fort Myers and Sanibel, Florida, and subterranean scenes near Wampum, Pennsylvania. Tom Savini returned to perform special make-up effects for the picture, and he was aided by a team of artists that included Greg Nicotero and Howard Berger, who eventually became recognized for their work on the television show The Walking Dead.