Shudder Has Your Ticket to See George A. Romero’s Long-Lost ‘The Amusement Park’ This Summer!

Horror

Products You May Like

Shudder has your ticket to finally see George A. Romero‘s long-lost 1973 film, The Amusement Park, and will release it this coming summer in North America, the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, Bloody Disgusting just learned.

“Recently discovered and restored 46 years after its completion by the George A. Romero Foundation and produced by Suzanne Romero it was restored in 4K by IndieCollect in New York. The Amusement Park is an alluring snapshot of the filmmaker’s early artistic capacity and style, and would go on to inform his ensuing filmography.

“The film was originally commissioned by the Lutheran Society to raise awareness about ageism and elder abuse. Romero, however, conceived of what was perhaps his wildest, most imaginative movie, an allegory about the nightmarish realities of growing older.

“The Amusement Park stars Martin’s Lincoln Maazel as an elderly man who finds himself disoriented and increasingly isolated as the pains, tragedies, and humiliations of aging in America are manifested through roller coasters and chaotic crowds.”

“Though not in the horror genre it is George’s most terrifying film,” said Suzanne Romero. “It has Romero’s unique footprint all over it!”

In addition, Shudder released the film’s poster, created by Polish artist Aleksander Wasilewski.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

New Mac Miller Album Balloonerism Announced
Space station developers weigh in on NASA’s continuous presence rethink
Sabrina Carpenter reveals guests for her Netflix holiday special
“I want to add a different twist” Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 will rethink how it implements mini-games, says director Naoki Hamaguchi
‘Maybe Happy Ending’, ‘Death Becomes Her’ See Promising Broadway Numbers