

George A. Romero’s ‘Night of the Living Dead,’ featuring a live musical accompaniment by Bobby Sanabria and the Project X Band


Keeping with the exhibit’s multimedia approach, our Sounds of the Dead series brings the art-forms of two renown and accomplished Bronxites together for one fantastical collaboration: George A. Romero and Bobby Sanabria, for a special Día de los Muertos screening of the seminal horror film, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD*, with live musical accompaniment performed by Sanabria and his Project X band. Download Flier
Part musical prowess. Part improvisation. Part magic. 100% memorable.
Preceded by ‘History of the Dead: With NOTLD Experts Jim Cirronella and Michael R. Felsher‘ panel discussion at 6pm (FREE), 7pm cash bar reception and Halloween Costume Contest (FREE), and post-screening Q&A (with paid admission to the film screening).
* Not suitable for young audiences. Extreme Zombie and Human violence. Parental discretion advised.
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Make sure to stop by the Sound of the Dead AUDIO STATION in the lobby.
“Sounds of the Dead”—part of the George A. Romero: Stay Scared!™ multimedia exhibition—unleashes the horrific music, sound effects, and sonic wonder of horror films via live performances, panel discussions, and visual installations.
This interactive Sounds of the Dead AUDIO STATION provides sample tracks from Romero’s films as well as music that shaped his career and served as the soundscape to his life. 1. Pick a sound activation ticket 2. Place face up in center of black box. Listen. Repeat.


Night of the Living Dead will be presented in its original aspect ratio of 1.37:1.
The screener is from the Criterion Collection’s restoration 4K/Blu-ray set, was sourced from a digital transfer created in 4K resolution on Cineric’s wet-gate film scanner, primarily from the 35 mm original camera negative. For the few sections that proved impossible to scan from that element-approximately 1 percent of the feature film—a 35 mm fine-grain from 1968 was used. The transfer was supervised by director George A. Romero, co-screenwriter John A. Russo, sound engineer Gary R. Streiner, and producer Russell W. Streiner.
After the evaluation of eighteen separate source elements, the original monaural soundtrack was remastered under the supervision of Romero and Gary Streiner from the original quarter-inch mix masters, quarter-inch premix audio tape, a final composite 16 mm magnetic track, and the 16mm magnetic mix units. The restoration was performed at Audio Mechanics, led by John Polito.
The film’s restoration was made possible by the Museum of Modern Art and The Film Foundation, with funding provided by the George Lucas Family Foundation and the Celeste Bartos Fund for Film Preservation.
Presented by
LOCATION: Bronx Music Hall
438 East 163rd Street, Bronx, NY 10451


