@Neil Brown For sure. The line also makes less sense than in the original, since only victims bitten or scratched by zombies turn. The line carries more weight when all humans brains that aren't destroyed come alive after death, no exceptions.
I know. You can see the fear in his face. In the end he was a good person even though he jerk at frist he gave his life to save the survivors in the end. Unlike the other guy who owns the boat.
This line actually scared the shit out of me as kid and I couldn't walk past graveyards in fear of the dead rising from their graves. Oh which fun irrational fears you had as kid
gimpinmypants Yep yep its like they knew the death will walked earth soon check this out ppl call this technology.. Cuzz some scared to Die r lose The devil is closer then i thought /watch?v=9uXQhGqSk7c
You probably already know this, but he also says the exact same line "when there is no more room in Hell, the dead will walk the Earth" but in the original, he was quoting his grandfather, a voodoo priest in Trinidad.
The fact that they got Ken Foree to come back to Dawn of the Dead and say his famous line is one reason I love this. He said it and 1978 and they got him to say it in 2004.
@@rodicow3491 religious wacko? Considering the undead only ever attacked humans (notice they never once went for the dog) there IS a supernatural element to it. It was a biblical apocalypse for all the sins
@@proskeptical789 james gunn said the cause of the outbreak was supernatural; also I think the point of the scene was to make a stupid priest speech (except for the abortion part witch I think is horrible) look serious because is an end of the world context, and that is why this scene is so effective.
I can't watch this movie on TV unless this scene is in it. I know it's weird, but this is honestly the best scene in the movie. It makes the movie go from a 9/10 to a 10/10.
@@stephanekaufmann411 maybe cuz its depicting abortion, and gay marriage in a negative manner. Which goes against the woke mob who would freak out if they saw it.
But he's not. World in original Dawn of dead didn't recovered. You can see it in the sequel called Day of the dead. This is remake not a sequel so they are two separate people
@Stefano Pavone Best it could be seen as is he's the same guy in an alternate reality where the zombie apocalypse happened later in his life. Still, its just a cameo tribute to the original film, thats all.
The scariest part of this scene is just that sentence and how afterwards we see the characters sleeping and we can hear the horde of the undead outside begging to break in it’s just a horrifying scenario I wouldn’t be able to sleep
Imagine sleep inside a mall with millions of undead outside trying to get into? Man it's crazy and I really don't know how these characters could sleep.
@@viniciusoliveraa millions thats too loud of a statement. At best there are thousands around the mall. But that doesn't make things any better... still terrifying.
I still remember seeing this film in the cinemas back in 2004 - 2005 with a group of friends, still to this date almost 10 years later, this one particular line & scene still sends shivers up my spine. Great scene & great film, in my top 10 for sure!! :)
This scene is brilliant, the eerie music, but let's not overlook the superb performance of Ken Foree (lead role from the original in 78) in this tiny scene, the choice of words, the delay and conviction behind them make what should have been a nothing scene into a memorable part of the film we're still talking about years later.
Went into the cinema without really knowing that much about this film. Must rank as one of the best remakes/reboot/reworkings ever. Man, that opening sequence with “Have a nice day” playing and Johnny Cash in the opening credits. A monster of modern horror. A+
I Met Ken Foree at a convention in Pittsburgh, 2011, and he was cool enough to take a video saying that line from the original Dawn of the Dead. Awesome!!
The fact that this preacher is played by Ken Foree, the guy who played Peter in the original Dawn of the Dead and the orignal to say the first " When there is no more room" God i love it, the best scene of the movie as its a throw back to Dawn of the dead 1978 ( my all time favorite T_T )
I saw this movie in 2004. in cinema when I was 8 years old..scariest experience ever haha. No horror movie terrified me like this one, probably because I saw it as a kid, i saw it again on TV a few years ago and It wasn't scary to me at all, any todays horrors isn't scary to me neither. But I remember how scared I was in 2004.!
Remember, this was made by Zack Snyder when it comes to him making movies he holds back when it is released in theaters, but once that movie gets to be on DVD, he does a director's cut and add some pretty cool scenes or maybe extended.
this is one of the Best quotes ever !!...a very well done scene , the music , the message and the acting were phenomenal...this scene stills gives me the chills.
I just now realize that this is the SAME GUY, that was one of the star main characters of the original Dawn of the Dead 1978? Can't believe I just noticed -- hes much older here obviously.
I'm not a tiny bit religious, but to me this sort of mythology was always the best reason for the dead walking the earth. Gives me chills. Also, it's cool they got Ken Foree to do it homage to the original DotD.
This might be one of the most Metal things spoken into existence. \m/ Soo many bands back in the mid to late aughts used this clip as a sample before a heavy af breakdown. I miss the old killwhitneydead days where everyone was using dope samples from movies.
Jesus said that hell is a place of weeping and gnashing of teeth, where the worm never dies and where the fire is never quenched and eternal punishment and outer darkness. And the only way to escape it is to repent of your sins and have him as your Lord.
This is a great sequence. I love and am fascinated about this concept that the reason for the revival of the corpses is due to an evil force, not an airborne disease, chemical spillage, virus or something that humankind can distinguish (like the new age zombie movies - 28 days later, or the walking dead) Its something arranged between Good and Evil, agreeing that the only way human mortals can get their shit together is by scaring THE SHIT out of them while they are alive.
I've gotten a lot of negative responses in my supposition that, to date, this is the best of the genre. (2004). Some of this, especially, the pasted News Footage could have used a lot more CARE. What nobody seems to notice is the use of color and white burnouts in the direction. Absolutely brilliant art! That use of technique absolutely conveyed a sense you might imagine if in the moment. Almost.. a nightmare state! The ending was the TOPPER! This was a finish that took the Director's concept to absolute perfection. The hope, the light ... the mood in to its enevitable conclusion. The barking dog at the end was another clever device. 2004 remake had it all. Tell me what more you want... need
The fact that this scene is edited is unreal to me. The preacher is designed to be a conflicting character: passing judgement on everyone while also wearing gaudy rings and jewelry (a satire on the church and how it trades redemption for tax exempt wealth). I bet the people who censored this scene don't realize that, even at the time of it being released there were people who nodded it, was disgusted by it, or recognized the theme of hypocrisy I had mentioned earlier. This character is not supposed to be likeable: he is supposed to hurt feelings and judge us because *that's what he is designed to do*. Amidst the death, rampage, starvation and chaos, the face of religion nevertheless shows up to shamelessly put its trademark on the end of humanity. It's a fucking _movie_, and any censorship of this scene removes the power of it.
When I saw this scene, I assumed a deeper meaning. No one really knows what's going on. People try to make sense of it all based on their own respective perspectives, and see whatever they're predisposed to see in the chaos. Scientists see disease and the religious see God's wrath. That there are "politically incorrect" interpretations only adds to the realism, as that's what one would expect in such a situation.
When this movie came out in movie-theaters, I remember I very very big ad in the cinema with this tagline but in Spanish "Cuando no haya mas espacio en el infierno, los muertos caminaran sobre la tierra", my sister was "wow, I want to see it" and yeah we did, and it didn't disappoint
One of the best scenes from the DotD remake. My only problem with the remake is that it had nothing to say. No message. Only mindless action. Oh well it was still a entertaining movie.
First time i saw the remake of Dawn of the Dead and heard this audio byte... the first thing that came to mind was the original 1980s Day of the Dead in the Montana underground bunker... The one characters grandfather told him this exact line as a child
My grandpa told me this as a kid and it stuck with me it made me sleep with one eye open Covid happened To this day when ever I think about him sitting me on his lap telling me this quote it sends shivers down my spine It stuck with me and honestly It’s something I will tell my future generations later on
One of the best scenes in the movie. Everybody clueless. Nobody knows whats going on other than the fact that their friends, family, and neighbors are all turning into something and ripping people apart. Everybody settles in for the night, unsure of what lies ahead the next day or even if they'll make it through the night. Praying that the monsters they have seen and heard right outside the mall don't find their way in. CJ is the last one awake, watching news coverage of the chaos and total societal collapse occurring right outside. As reporters begin signing off the networks permanently and begin fleeing to their families and loved ones, one man is broadcasting one final message to the world before everything goes dark for good. While we can only assume the same devastation and chaos is taking place right outside this man's door, he sits peacefully in his office and delivers this final, bone-chilling message, before presumably fleeing with his family and loved ones as well. All of this occompanied by this amazing, tragic, eeriely calming, and hauntingly foreboding music. Just a perfectly crafted scene. It's not an important scene, but it sets the tone for the whole movie.
Whoaaaaa what an iconic scene. I had no idea this was in my memories until I was looking up different movie history and I read the old dawn of the dead movie poster and then it was like a lightbulb went off and I said where did I hear this from? Had to Google it and duh of course.
Their people will become like walking corpses, their flesh rotting away. Their eyes will rot in their sockets, and their tongues will rot in their mouths. -Zechariah 14:13