Filmmaker Tina Romero grew up with zombies as the daughter of late horror master George A. Romero (Night of the Living Dead), but she never thought she’d actually make a zombie film. Not only did Tina Romero prefer musicals over horror as a child, but the idea of even broaching her father’s enduring zombie legacy […]
Filmmaker Tina Romero grew up with zombies as the daughter of late horror master George A. Romero (Night of the Living Dead), but she never thought she’d actually make a zombie film.
Not only did Tina Romero prefer musicals over horror as a child, but the idea of even broaching her father’s enduring zombie legacy was intimidating. That changed when the filmmaker struck on the concept for Queens of the Dead, inspired by her experience as a DJ in New York City.
In Queens of the Dead, a zombie apocalypse breaks out in Brooklyn on the night of a giant warehouse party, where an eclectic group of drag queens, club kids, and frenemies must put aside their drama and use their unique skills to fight against the brain-thirsty, scrolling undead. It’s the type of glam-gore setup that provided fertile ground for social commentary, a George A. Romero staple, while letting Tina Romero put her personal stamp on the horror subgenre.
“I am such a huge fan of my father’s, as a person and as a filmmaker,” Romero tells BD of her debut film’s origins and growing up with a master of horror. “I loved his movies and I loved him very much. I was hesitant to dabble in the zombie genre for a long time. When I went to film school, a lot of people would ask me, ‘Don’t you want to do a zombie movie?’ And I would always say, ‘Hell no. I want to do a gender-flipped Peter Pan. I want to do fantasy. I want to do musicals.‘ Because that’s really the stuff I grew up on.
“I describe myself as an edgy cheese ball. I was in my bedroom at night watching Pippi Longstocking, West Side Story, all the ’80s Disney flicks, and then I would walk to the bathroom and tiptoe past a horrifying movie poster of a terrifying monkey or Fluffy’s crate from