Italian cinema has had ahuge impact on the horror genre, taking it into strange, often avant-garde territory. Gory, unpredictable, and dreamlike in quality, these movies would influence future directors both in and out of horror.

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Once George Romero gave fresh life(ironically) to the zombie subgenre, Italian movie makers were quick to jump on the bandwagon, fusing elements of Romero’sDawn of the Deadwith their own iconic style. TheseItalian zombie movieswere deliberate cash-ins, of course, in some cases passing themselves off as unofficial sequels to Western properties. However, the originality and quality of these movies has made them valid in their own right.

10City Of The Living Dead

The first movie in Fulci’s ‘Gates of Hell’ loose trilogy,City of the Living Deadunleashes a horde of zombies straight from Hell and onto the streets of New York City. It’s then up to a psychic and a news reporter to save the day.

Gory scenes, strange plotting, and questionable acting choices are all present and correct, and there are some suitably creepy moments that are beautifully shot by Fulci. It was a taste of things to come, as the director was honing his skills ready forThe Beyond.

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9The Beyond

Unlike their Western cousins, which featured more plausible iterations of the apocalypse,Italian zombie movies often had a supernatural bent. Lucio Fulci’sThe Beyondis no exception, dealing with a woman who finds a gateway to Hell.

A gory, disorienting movie,The Beyondis part of a loose trilogy and throws a shocking array of memorable set pieces at the audience. From violent hospital shoot-outs to bizarre dream sequences, this is one of the more memorable Italian zombie movies ever made.

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8The House By The Cemetery

The House by the Cemeterygives the zombie genre a mummy-esque spin, involving a member of the undead who feasts on mere mortals to stay alive. It’s a little odd, but arguably one of the best Italian zombie movies of all time.

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Written as an ode to HP Lovecraft,House by the Cemeteryisn’t quite as surreal asThe Beyond, but Lucio Fulci makes sure it’s a disturbing ride all the same. More restrained,with references toFrankenstein(perhaps the very first zombie novel), it’s an atmospheric journey with some suitably gory moments.

7Burial Ground

Largely plotless,Burial Groundis a relentless, fast-paced zombie movie in which the undead are awakened by an evil curse. This movie’s imagination exceeded its production values, with some particularly nasty death scenes marred by poor special effects.

Notable for starring 25-year old Peter Bark as a young boy,Burial Groundis a somber grindhouse gorefest. It divided critics upon its release but is now remembered as something of a flawed gem by zombie movie aficionados.

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6Cemetery Man

One of the wittiest Italian zombie movies,Cemetery Manstars A-lister Rupert Everett as a graveyard caretaker who has to defend his town from the rising dead, despite being shunned by the locals. It was released in 1994, years after the zombie movie craze had died away.

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Mixing horror, humor, and romance,Cemetery Manis fiercely original and brings a fresh perspective to the zombie subgenre.Director Martin Scorseseclaimed it to be one of the best Italian movies of the 1990s, which is very high praise indeed.

Set in and around Manchester (largely because director Jorge Grau thought it sounded exotic),The Living Dead at Manchester Morgueis afantastic Spanish-Italianzombie movie that simply oozes atmosphere. That, and an awful lot of blood.

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Set mostly in the beautiful countryside of the British Lake District, the movie has a different look and feel from most of its contemporaries. Dealing with themes of class, it’s a bleak dirge of a movie with some genuinely gory moments. None of it actually takes place in a Manchester morgue, however.

4Demons

Demonswas directed by Lamberto Bava and produced by the legendary Dario Argento. It is a brutal, chaotic romp with plenty of crowd-pleasing gore sequences and more than its fair share of genuinely horrific moments.

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Once again, the zombies that feature in this movie are of a supernatural bent, not too dissimilar from the Deadites of theEvil Deadfranchise. What it lacks in plot, it certainly makes up for in thrills. A sequel followed, which many agree to be superior.

3Zombie Holocaust

Branded an “incoherent mess” by critics at the time of its release, the brilliantly-titledZombie Holocaustis Italian exploitation cinema at its worst. Even so, it’s still a pretty decent zombie movie with plenty of violent scenes.

A mad doctor is conducting experiments on both the living and the dead on an island in Indonesia, and the scientists who are out to stop him face multiple problems. Not only are there hordes of the decomposing undead to contend with, but there’s also atribe of flesh-hungry cannibals. It’s no classic, but definitely one for gorehounds.

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2Nightmare City

Nightmare Cityis notable for featuring zombies considerably more agile than their lumbering cousins. Like some of the more recent zombie flicks, the movie’s zombies are faster and much less docile than audiences were accustomed to at the time of its release.

Nightmare Citydeals with the threat of nuclear war, and its zombies are the result of science gone wrong as opposed to something supernatural. As a result, it feels a lot closer tothe works of Romerothan Fulci. It also boasts plenty of gore, as well as some questionable dancing.

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1Zombi 2

Another Fulci classic,Zombi 2was deliberately intended to act as a sequel to George A Romero’s seminalDawn of the Dead(hence the ‘2’ in the title). It’s far less subtle than the movie it is paying homage to (and ripping off) but is absolutely a classic in its own right.

Tying the zombie genre back to its voodoo roots,Zombi 2is once again grounded in the supernatural. Thanks to some extremely uncomfortable moments (including a splinter going through the eye of a young woman), it earned its place on the UK’s video nasties list. It also features a scene in whicha zombie fights a shark underwater.

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