Dawn of the Dead
Directed by Zack Snyder
Written by James Gunn
Starring Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Mekhi Pfifer
Release Date March 19th, 2004
Zack Snyder’s Dawn of the Dead (2004) reimagines George A. Romero’s zombie classic with explosive energy, sharp humor, and unexpected heart. Part action spectacle, part survival horror, it remains one of the few remakes that truly earns its place among the greats.
A New Dawn for the Dead
Before Watchmen or 300, Zack Snyder made his feature directorial debut with Dawn of the Dead, a remake of George A. Romero’s 1979 horror masterpiece. Written by James Gunn (yes, Guardians of the Galaxy James Gunn), this version reanimates the familiar story with early-2000s grit, relentless pacing, and a surprisingly effective emotional core.
Sarah Polley stars as Ana, a nurse who barely escapes her suburban home after her husband is attacked by a zombified neighbor child. Shell-shocked and alone, she bands together with a handful of survivors — a stoic cop (Ving Rhames), a practical everyman (Jake Weber), and a desperate young couple expecting a baby (Mekhi Phifer and Inna Korobkina). Together, they take refuge inside a shopping mall, hoping its walls can hold back the apocalypse.
The Mall as Fortress — and Graveyard
Like Romero’s original, Snyder’s Dawn unfolds almost entirely within the mall — a gleaming, sterile microcosm of consumerism now overrun by death. The survivors bond over fear and necessity, and the film captures that chaotic balance of camaraderie and panic with real tension. Toronto and Ontario stand in convincingly for Milwaukee, Wisconsin, grounding the film’s apocalypse in bland, suburban normalcy.
While most of the side characters exist mainly as zombie bait, a few stand out. Michael Kelly is memorable as CJ, a mall security guard whose shift from selfishness to sacrifice gives the film its one real arc of redemption. Still, the heart of the film lies with Polley’s calm resilience and Rhames’s stoic gravitas — a pairing that grounds the carnage in something recognizably human.
Fast Zombies, Faster Deaths
In contrast to Romero’s shambling undead, Snyder and Gunn’s zombies sprint, leap, and claw with feral speed. The change enraged purists at the time, but it works here, amping up both the suspense and the gallows humor. One standout sequence finds the survivors on the roof, trading sniper shots with a gun store owner across the street — picking off zombies that resemble celebrities.
The film doesn’t bother with explaining how the outbreak began. As in Romero’s original, “when there’s no more room in Hell, the dead will walk the Earth” is explanation enough. What matters is the momentum — Snyder’s film rarely pauses long enough for us to catch our breath, even as it occasionally sneaks in moments of quiet dread and melancholy.
From Satire to Survival
What Dawn of the Dead (2004) lacks in Romero’s social satire, it makes up for with pure adrenaline. There’s little of the consumerist commentary that defined the original, but the focus on survival and humanity in crisis gives the remake its own voice. Gunn’s script, rooted in Troma-style pulp, balances gore with wit, and Snyder’s eye for visual spectacle elevates it beyond most horror remakes.
The film’s ending — bleak, ambiguous, and darkly funny — may divide audiences. But in true horror fashion, it lingers long after the credits roll.
A Rare Remake That Works
As a rule, horror fans distrust remakes, and usually for good reason. But Dawn of the Dead (2004) defies the odds. It’s scary, funny, gory, and surprisingly well-acted — a slick, smart reimagining that honors Romero while staking its own ground.
Two decades later, Snyder’s debut remains one of the best zombie films of the 21st century. Not bad for a movie that starts with a ten-year-old neighbor biting your throat out.












