There’s a recipe that almost always amounts to a killer movie-going experience. When you mix George A. Romero with zombies, you can’t go wrong… most of the time. After all, he is the father of cinema’s (un)deadliest genre! Romero broke onto the scene in the late 1960s with Night of the Living Dead, a gory, unintentional-yet-perfect social satire that paved the way for the most gruesome movie monster that the form had ever seen. He’d up the ante a decade later with what many consider to be the greatest zombie movie ever made, Dawn of the Dead, and would cap it all off in the ’80s with the epic Day of the Dead. He’d take the ’90s off but come back hard in the wake of 28 Days Later by dishing up Land of the Dead, an unusually big and expensive studio picture by Romero’s standards. The…