First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"We've heard all we need to know. We have to try to get out of here."
"Don't you know what's goin' on out there? This is no Sunday School picnic!"
"Now get the hell down in the cellar. You can be the boss down there, I'm boss up here!"
"[Last Line] Take us North."
"Shawn Roberts - Mike"
"Tony Munch - Anchor"
"Max McCabe - Mouse (as Maxwell McCabe-Lokos)"
"Boyd Banks - Butcher (Zombie)"
"Jennifer Baxter - Number 9"
"Tony Nappo - Foxy"
"Joanne Boland - Pretty Boy"
"Krista Bridges - Motown"
"Pedro Miguel Arce - Pillsbury"
"Eugene Clark - Big Daddy"
"Robert Joy - Charlie"
"Asia Argento - Slack"
"Dennis Hopper - Kaufman"
"John Leguizamo - Cholo"
"Simon Baker - Riley"
"John Leguizamo: I didn't know what to expect working with George. I mean, I admired him of course; Night of the Living Dead is one of the great movies of all time; outside that it's a horror movie and it started the whole zombie genre; but it's still a great movie and I used to watch it in New York. I saw Chiller Theater, we used to have that in New York, and Creature Feature. I didn't know George was going to be, how he was going to be with real actors. I know he's got the horror thing down and he's got certain rules he has to have how a zombie's got to move slow, because they have rigor mortis; how can they move fast? He doesn't tell them how to move because he doesn't want them all to [look] like CGI armies, so he lets everybody find their inner zombie, which is pretty cool, and he's good with the acting. You know, he really let us loose, but he would also reign us in, you know, he was really watching the acting. I was really impressed with that, so I was making up s*** all over the place. Some of it stuck, some of it will be on the DVD. It will go somewhere. It's never wasted."
"[Near End] Sky flowers don't work no more."
"Put some flowers in the graveyard. How come you call them that, Riley? I don't get it. There here ain't the kind of flowers you lay on the ground, these here are sky flowers. Way up in heaven..."
"WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE? YOU HAVE NO RIGHT!!!"
"[shoots Cholo who gets back up and continues toward Kaufman] Nah, you're dead! [sees that Cholo has turned into a zombie] Oh my god, you really are dead."
"In a world where the dead are returning to life, the word "trouble" loses much of its meaning."
"Zombies, man. They creep me out."
"[Cholo has been bitten and Foxy asks him if he'd rather be shot] Nah, I've always wanted to see how the other half lives."
"There's only three things a man should do when he's alone, be born, die, and we all know the other thing..."
"[Cholo notices a Zombie Gardener outside of Dead Reckoning] I know for a fact that if it wasn't for this truck I wouldn't be any different to that poor Mexican bastard out there."
"Inna Kurobkina β Luda"
"Tom Savini β Sheriff Cahill"
"Ken Foree β Televangelist"
"Bruce Bohne β Andy"
"Kim Poirier β Monica"
"Matt Frewer β Frank"
"R.D. Reid β Glen"
"Jayne Eastwood β Norma"
"Boyd Banks β Tucker"
"Michael Barry β Bart"
"Lindy Booth β Nicole"
"Kevin Zegers β Terry"
"Ty Burrell β Steve Markus"
"Mekhi Phifer β Andre"
"Michael Kelly β CJ"
"Jake Weber β Michael"
"Ving Rhames β Kenneth"
"Sarah Polley β Ana"
"Snyder's career actually began in controversy, with the 2004 remake of Dawn of the Dead. The original Dawn of the Dead is perhaps the greatest zombie movie ever made, a shambling attack on American consumption that shows zombies staggering around a mall, winking at the way many of us anesthetize our deeper feelings and thoughts through buying crap. It seemed an odd fit for a director whose previous credits were all commercials and music videos. And it's fair to say that Snyder's version largely eschews nuance in favor of being awesome. Instead of stumbling and shuffling, his zombies sprint. Instead of a not-so-veiled attack on consumerism, his movie would be more of a take on post-tragedy community building. It was a horror flick, sure, but without any of the psychological tension that propped up the original. Above all, it was a flat-out thrill ride. In Snyder's Dawn of the Dead, the zombies didn't have to mean anything, because they could run, headlong, after their prey. Somewhat fittingly for the diminishing returns Snyder has yielded throughout his career, the best thing he's ever directed are the first 10 minutes of Dawn of the Dead. I've embedded a portion of them below, as well as the film's terrific opening credits. Watching those two clips will give you a good sense of some of Snyder's strengths. For one thing, he's terrific at casting strong actors. (In Dawn of the Dead, that distinction belongs to Sarah Polley, as a young woman watching her world go to hell.) For another, he's a master of montage editing, where seemingly disconnected moments bump up against each other in ways that create new connections and contrasts. (Those opening credits are a tremendous example.) The clips (particularly the first one) also hint at some key elements of Snyder's aesthetic. For one thing, he uses far fewer medium shots than most directors. He likes alternating between wide shots (as when the protagonist observes the chaos devouring her neighborhood) and shots that zoom in close on his actors, to a variety of different degrees (as when we see her worried expression as she takes it all in). When Snyder does use medium shots, he uses them in weird ways. Take the short moment where our hero talks to the man across the street who's holding a gun. Both characters are filmed in mid-shot, but Snyder puts them both in the same frame exactly once (when we see the man across the street over her shoulder, as if we're standing behind her). Blink and you'd miss this shot. Most directors would give us at least a few lines of dialogue while the two shared the same frame, but not Snyder. They're never in the same frame while talking to each other. The medium shot is the cinema's version of normalcy. Certainly, there are several where something huge happens, but a lot of the time, cinema uses the medium shot to break up the "pay attention to me!" panoramas of the wide shot and the forced intimacy of the close-up. That Snyder doesn't really use them in the first place, let alone typically, gives his work a heightened feel β everything subconsciously feels bigger than it otherwise might. Indeed, you'll note that the scene from Dawn of the Dead I've described above mimics the look of another visual medium: comic books."
"Q: The most effective part of the film is told through a walkie-talkie exchangeβno gore at all."
"Q: The most common criticism of your film is that it doesn't go as deeply into sociology as Romero's filmβI disagree with that read, I don't think the original is all that deep and, in fact, I think that your picture has a broader, subtler, more satirical edge."