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movie king George A. Romero passed away in 2017, but his legacy will live on forever in his work鈥攊ncluding, now, an early 1970s lost film thats soon debuting on Shudder. To learn more about The Amusement Park, io9 hopped on a video call with Suzanne Desrocher-Romero, the late filmmakers wife. The Amusement Park was actually a commissioned film on the subject of aging鈥攁nd Desrocher-Romero spearheaded the films recovery鈥攂ut its not without its Romero-style horrors. It may also come as no surprise that shes the founder and president of the George A. Romero Foundation. Desrocher-Romero spoke with us about her work and why sh
stanley mug e was concerned about how fans might react to The Amusement Park. She also gave us an update of sorts on her late husbands intended final zombie movie, Twilight of the Dead; and her surprising pick for least f
stanley canada avorite among his films: He said to me, Oh m
stanley cup y god, Suze, you are the only person, Ill have you know, that says this. And I go, Im sorry George, but I just dont love it. Cheryl Eddy, io9: The Amusement Park is not a typical George Romero film, starting with the fact that it was commissioned by the Lutheran Society. What was its original intention Suzanne Desrocher-Romero: It was commissioned by the Lutheran SeniorLife, a precursor to programs like Meals on Wheels, and they wanted to hire a director to shoot something for their community centers to get the word out, to help get support, and all of that. It was his only work-for-hire ever in his wh Cwcz A Dog-Killing Worm Is on the Loose in California
for the second season of The Path, a drama about the inner workings on a Scientology-esque religious gr
stanley cup nz oup that walks the fine line between drug-fueled hippie commune and full-on cult. However, the next season has a pretty huge question to answer, based on the events of the first one: Is The Path science fiction
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stanley cup canada ch v=XMNXtuPCh0Y For most of the season, the answer would be Hell no. Its simply a modern-day drama about Eddie, played by Breaking Bads Aaron Paul, struggling with his faith as a key member of Meyerism, a new-age spiritual movement that bears a striking similarity to Scientology. The idea the show postulates at first is that the Wizard of Oz has always been a man behind a certain鈥攊n this case, a slowly dying leader called Stephen Meyer鈥攁nd that belief invents divinity. However, the final episode of the first season threw all that out the window, in a way that challenges the way we perceive their world in the coming months. Be prepared to drink the Kool-Aid, folks. In season 1 last episode, Miracle, Eddie, nearing his wits end, heads to the Meyerist compound in Peru to confirm, once and for all, that Stephen Meyer had died. After all, there was absolutely nothing that could cure him of his disease. But then, Eddie sees Stephen standing by a window, looking fit, healthy, and very much alive. This isnt the only miracle that happens in this episode. A detectives baby is completely healed after Meyerist leader Cal prays over the chi