Send us a textHorror history feels different when you’re standing where it happened. We sit down at Living Dead Weekend 2024 to celebrate George A. Romero, trade stories with longtime friends, and trace how a single location—the Monroeville Mall—became a cultural landmark that still pulls fans from the UK, Germany, and beyond. It’s part reunion, part field study in why certain films never fade: they attach to places, people, and rituals that outlast trends.Our conversation dives into Creepshow and why it remains a high-water mark for anthology horror. We talk about the EC Comics DNA baked into the film’s design, the craft of threading five stories without losing momentum, and the joy of working with icons like Hal Holbrook, Fritz Weaver, and Leslie Nielsen. The set memories are unforgettable, from performance notes to Nielsen’s infamous “fart box,” a perfectly timed prank that says everything about his comic instincts. That story becomes a lens on his career arc—from early heavy in dramatic TV to deadpan genius in Police Squad and The Naked Gun—showing how Creepshow acted as a bridge between two distinct personas.We widen the lens to celebrate genre shapeshifters like George Kennedy and Christopher Walken, exploring how great actors manage tension, timing, and tone whether they’re playing menace or mirth. There’s a loving nod to Walken’s under-the-radar comedic turn in Envy, plus reflections on why malls and movie locations function as living archives for fans. If you care about Romero’s legacy, the evolution of anthology horror, or the alchemy that lets actors cross from drama to comedy, you’ll feel right at home here—surrounded by stories, laughter, and a community that keeps the flame alive.If this conversation made you smile or sparked a new watchlist, follow the show, share it with a horror-loving friend, and leave a quick review to help more fans find us.Support the show