Can a film be as crazy as its monsters? That was the feeling when moviegoers first saw George A. Romero's Pittsburgh-made zombie classic. Instead of the standard alternation of scare scenes and dialogue scenes (to give the audience a break between shocks), here the walking dead just keep on coming, seemingly by the hundreds, to attack the increasingly hysterical humans holed up in a house by the cemetery. Romero also broke one of the few horror rules left: that children don't eat their parents. After Night of the Living Dead, no social norm was safe.
Top 25 Horror Movies
From silent vampires to animated murders, from sharks that won't die to a love story set amid a zombie takeover, more than a century's worth of big-screen scares