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1* AllStarCast: In stark contrast with the original English version, the 2021 crowdfunded Japanese dub features many well-known {{Anime}} voice actors, including Creator/JunichiSuwabe as Ben, Creator/MikaDoi as Helen Cooper, Creator/MiyukiSawashiro as Judy, and Creator/HiroyaIshimaru as Sheriff [=McClelland=].
2* AbilityOverAppearance:
3** Ben was not written to be black and Romero always claimed he only cast Duane Jones because he gave the best audition, rather than to make a point or be controversial.
4** Inverted with Judith Ridley, who played Judy. The producers were so struck by her beauty that they wrote a part for her.
5* ActingForTwo:
6** Karl Hardman (Harry) is the voice on the radio in the opening scene.
7** Marilyn Eastman (Helen) plays the zombie that plucks a bug from a tree and eats it.
8** Kyra Schon (Karen) doubled as the body upstairs when Ben is moving it. Romero felt that a mannequin wouldn't look realistic.
9** Besides his NewscasterCameo as the TV anchor, Charles Craig played a zombie as well.
10* ActorInspiredElement:
11** Ben was originally written as an earthy, unrefined blue-collar type. Duane Jones, who had a solid academic background and worked as an acting coach, didn't feel comfortable with that and changed him into a calmer, more well-spoken character. Also, he talked the producers out of changing the ending [[spoiler:to have Ben survive]], feeling the original ending would be more potent and that black viewers in particular would relate to it better.
12** Barbara being a strong, charismatic character was changed to accommodate Judith O'Dea's interpretation of her as terrified and catatonic. The previous interpretation would later be used in the 1990 remake.
13* AmateurCast: Duane Jones and Judith O'Dea, themselves unknowns, were the only professional actors in the cast. The rest were production crew and friends of Romero's.
14* BannedInChina: Banned in Germany. Netflix was forced to withdraw the film by the ''German Commission for Youth Protection'' shortly after making it available.
15* BeamMeUpScotty: Johnny only says "They're coming to get you, Barbara!" once, followed by "They're coming for you!" twice.
16* {{Blooper}}: When Ben is nailing boards, some numbers can be seen on them. These were markings for continuity, and some boards were mistakenly put on backwards.
17* BreakthroughHit: For Creator/GeorgeARomero.
18* CaliforniaDoubling: The house used did not actually have a basement big enough to shoot in - so the basement scenes were filmed in the editing studio in Pittsburgh. It is regarded as the film that birthed the now active interest in using Pittsburgh as a filming location for movies and TV.
19* CastTheExpert: Bill Cardille, who played the news reporter, was an actual local TV HorrorHost in Pittsburgh.
20* CastTheRunnerUp: Judith Ridley reportedly also auditioned for Barbra before Judith O'Dea won the role. The crew still liked Ridley enough to hire her and created a new character ([[TheDanza named Judy]]) for her to play.
21* ChannelHop: Creator/AmericanInternationalPictures considered releasing the film, but they wanted the ending to be more upbeat and for there to be a TokenRomance in there. The film was released independently by the Walter Reade Organization, but because they accidentally forgot to put a copyright notice on the film prints (as per US copyright law at the time), the film immediately entered the public domain, and Romero refused to ever work with them again. It has been released to home video by a number of different studios, but "officially" from Anchor Bay, Elite Entertainment, 20th Century Fox (in a colorized edition), Dimension Films, and The Criterion Collection.
22* CreatorBacklash: To put it lightly, Creator/GeorgeARomero did ''not'' approve of the 30th Anniversary Edition, with Bill Hinzman also later admitting that they should have gotten Romero's approval before going ahead with making it. Averted, however, by John A. Russo, who gave a few DearNegativeReader interviews over the re-edit.
23* TheDanza: Judith Ridley as Judy.
24* DawsonCasting: Tom and Judy's actors were in their 20s when playing as the young teenage couple, although their actual ages aren't given.
25* DescendedCreator:
26** Johnny is played by Russell Streiner, who was also a producer.
27** Screenwriter John A. Russo is the zombie whom Ben hits with a tire iron.
28** Karl Hardman played Harry Cooper, and was also the make-up artist and electronic sound effects engineers. He also took the still images used for the end credits.
29* EnforcedMethodActing: The zombie extras eating bodies are actually eating roast ham covered in chocolate sauce. They were so grossed out the filmmakers joked they almost didn't need make-up for them to look pale and sickly.
30* ExecutiveMeddling: The distributor asked for two scenes to be removed - one eight-minute exposition between Harry and Helen in the basement (and there's an awkward jump cut where it was deleted), and a wide shot of zombies covering the landscape.
31* KilledByRequest: Duane Jones convinced the producers [[spoiler: ''not'' to spare his character at the end]], (correctly) believing it would be more shocking for white audiences and more impactful for black ones. Considering that there are still thinkpieces being written about that scene fifty years later, it's hard to argue he was wrong.
32* NoBudget: Made for $114,000 (equivalent to about $800,000 in 2016's money), which explains its inexperienced cast, cheap special effects and DeliberatelyMonochrome cinematography. Incredibly, they initially planned on a budget of just $6,000 (with each of the 10 partners of Image Ten, the production company set up to make the film, contributing $600), but quickly realized they'd need a whole lot more than that.
33* NoDubForYou: Just like many of earlier Romero's films, the movie didn't get a Japanese dub in its original theatrical release until 2021, when a new one was done by crowdfunding, and with an AllStarCast to boot.
34* TheOtherDarrin: In ''Re-Animation'', Sid Haig was replaced by Creator/AndrewDivoff for the role of Gerald Tovar Jr.
35* RealLifeRelative:
36** Harry and Karen Cooper were played by real life father and daughter Karl Hardman and Kyra Schon.[[note]]Schon was Hardman's real surname[[/note]] Contrary to some reports, Marilyn Eastman (Helen Cooper) wasn't married to Hardman and wasn't Schon's mother (but she'd been Hardman's longtime acting and business partner).
37** The zombie extras included several real life families.
38* ReferencedBy:
39** Clips from the film can be seen in the horror-themed video game, ''VideoGame/DinoTrauma''. In live-action.
40* SleeperHit: Something of a TropeCodifier. It debuted in Pittsburgh around Halloween 1968 and word-of-mouth turned it into a huge local hit, which attracted the attention of grindhouse theaters in other big cities, where the same word-of-mouth pattern repeated itself. It also benefited from NoSuchThingAsBadPublicity, when critical denunciations of the film (such as Creator/RogerEbert's[[note]]Though his ire was not directed toward the film itself, but rather it being treated as a typical schlocky horror picture of the time, and was being seen by children who were not the target audience at all, and were woefully unprepared for a truly terrifying film[[/note]]) attracted curious moviegoers. Then it started getting a strong reputation in scholarly film circles, including praise from ''Sight & Sound'' and ''Cahiers du Cinema'', and even a screening at New York's Museum of Modern Art in 1970.
41* ThrowItIn:
42** The character Judy wasn't originally in the story. Apparently the actress was just so sweet and photogenic that the crew created a part for her and just made up scenes for her as they went along. Which explains why she's basically a LivingProp.
43** The car crashing into a tree was done on a whim because they needed an excuse for why there was suddenly a dent in it after getting in an accident during production.
44** Barbra goes barefoot quickly in the movie because the crew lost one of the shoes. To this day the actress believes it was stolen by a crew member with a foot fetish.
45** Barbara's description of the events in the cemetery don't match what happened very well. This can be explained in-movie by the fact that she's going a little nuts. It's a little clearer why this is when you learn that that scene was ad-libbed, ''and'' the cemetery scene was ''the last scene filmed'' anyway.
46** George Kosana ad-libbed all of Sheriff [=McClelland's=] lines.
47* UncreditedRole: Russell Streiner was not credited for playing Johnny in the original film, although he was credited (along with Karl Hardman) as producer.
48* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
49** [[spoiler:In the original script Barbara was originally meant to survive the zombie attack.]]
50** Creator/TomSavini was supposed to do the effects, but he had to go to work as combat photographer in Usefulnotes/TheVietnamWar. He later directed ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1990''.
51** None other than [[Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood Betty Aberlin]] was Romero's first choice for Barbra, but she was unavailable.[[note]]Allegedly Creator/FredRogers was concerned about her ContractualPurity and personally nixed her casting, but he otherwise was fully supportive of Romero and the film. (Romero had actually been a director and crew member who filmed a segment on Rogers' show). When Romero later screened the film to Rogers, the sweet, saintly Presbyterian minister was delighted with his protege's [[NightmareFetishist graphic, nihilistic horror film, and thought it was a lot of fun.]] Yay, Mister Rogers.[[/note]]
52** The first concept Romero and co-writer John Russo had was a horror comedy about teenage aliens who arrive on Earth to hang out with human teens. The movie was also going to co-star an inept cop named Sheriff Suck and an alien pet that "looked like a clump of spaghetti." Eventually, the idea morphed into cannibal aliens, and then into just dead cannibals.
53** One idea for Harry Cooper would be for [[spoiler: him to die of his gun shot wounds and become a zombie. Helen would then come down into the basement to see him eating their daughter]]. This was deemed too disturbing, so they went with the original idea of [[spoiler: Karen becoming a zombie and killing Harry herself]].
54** Karl Hardman's rejected idea for the ending was that after [[spoiler:Ben gets shot and the posse moves on, we learn that one ghoul survived: Karen Cooper. In the finished film, Karen is still undead when Ben locks himself in the cellar and we don't see her again, so it's plausible]].
55* WordOfDante: The supposed racial undertones of the film and especially the DownerEnding are purely speculation on the part of critics and fans, as George A. Romero repeatedly stated that the character of Ben was written as a white man and no social allegory was originally intended. Hasn't stopped fans from treating it as canon or stopped Romero himself from later taking credit for it.
56* WorkingTitle: Was usually just called ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Monster Flick]]'' by the cast and crew during filming, with ''Night of Anubis'' and ''Night of the Flesh Eaters'' as early attempts at more formal titles. It was the distributor who came up with ''Night of the Living Dead''. While a better title, the distributor swapping the title card lead to the movie's loss of copyright.
57* WritingByTheSeatOfYourPants: John Russo wrote the shooting script in just three days, but it was constantly tinkered-with during filming. A large amount of the dialogue was ad-libbed.

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