Zombi (film series) explained

Zombi
Director:George A. Romero
Dario Argento
Lucio Fulci
Others
Released:
Country:Italy
United States
United Kingdom
Thailand
Australia
Germany
Spain
Netherlands
Korea
Language:Italian
English
Others

The Zombi series refers collectively to horror films that have been marketed, in various territories, as sequels to either George A. Romero's Italian-American film Dawn of the Dead (1978) or Lucio Fulci's Italian film Zombi 2 (1979). The latter was itself marketed by Italian distributors as a sequel to the former. A confusing history has emerged from the practice of reworking films as Zombi movies for release in different countries, a process during which a film may be given a different title in each country where it is released. In Britain and Thailand, these films were released as the Zombie Flesh Eaters series. In North America and Germany, the films became known as the Zombie series. The films maintained their original spelling, Zombi, when released in Australia and other select countries.

The Zombi series began when Romero's Dawn of the Dead film (released in European countries as Zombi) was re-edited by Dario Argento and re-scored by Goblin for its Italian and wider European releases. Following the film's success, a zombie film by Lucio Fulci was commissioned and titled Zombi 2, to appear as a sequel. A series of increasingly tenuous efforts by various producers to capitalize on the Zombi name in multiple countries ensued.[1]

Series by region

Italian series

The Italian series starts with Dawn of the Dead and is followed by Zombi 2 and its officially-released sequels.

British series

In the U.K., the series is known as Zombie Flesh Eaters. While it follows the Italian series in proper order, it ignores Dawn of the Dead as the first entry, and instead starts with Zombi 2, adding the unrelated film Oltre la morte as a third installment.

German series

The German series, like the Italian series, starts off with Dawn of the Dead, but ignores Fulci's Zombi 2 (which was released separately as Woodoo), and instead continues with Day of the Dead and the Italian Zombi 3.

Thai series

The Thai Zombi series follows the titling and numbering of the British series, but adds the unrelated film Killing Birds with the new title, Zombie Flesh Eaters 4.[2]

Australian series

The Australian version of the series uses roman numerals and is composed of sequels only, most of which are re-titled Italian films. However, one exclusive installment was produced titled Zombi VIII: Urban Decay in 2020. The series starts off with Zombi IV: Bakterion and concludes with Zombi VIII: Urban Decay.

American series

Although the American series begins with Zombi 2 and continues in the established sequence, some of the films were re-titled again and the titles do not follow in numerical order. Zombi 2 was renamed Zombie, but Zombi 3 was renamed Zombie 3 rather than Zombie 2. Two additional films were released on home video with titles that would imply that they were sequels, but which had nothing to do with the Italian series.

In the 1990s, several unrelated titles were released as Zombie sequels by T-Z Video (a.k.a. Edde Entertainment).
These titles were as follows:

Other films

Notes and References

  1. Russell, Jamie. Book of the Dead. FAB Press, 2005 .
  2. Web site: Zombie Collection [DVD ] (4 Discs set)]. eThaiCD. January 5, 2021.
  3. Web site: The Italian Zombie Series Quagmire. III Marek, Ray. The Horror Syndicate. January 12, 2020. January 5, 2021.
  4. Web site: The Confusing As Fuck "Zombi" Series. June 9, 2021.
  5. Web site: Zombi, Zombie, Zambino: The chaotic story of the world's weirdest non-franchise.. January 16, 2021. June 9, 2021.