Anti-Zombie Rant
Jan. 7th, 2011 01:00 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Does anyone else find zombies utterly uninteresting, tedious and faintly nauseating? I don't want to read about them and I certainly don't want to watch them. I can hardly wait until they are completely passé.
One writer who did something interesting with the shambling-rotting-flesh routine was Andre Norton (I think in Perilous Dreams) where the virus itself had a sort of intelligence that drove the decomposing victim to see out a new host. She did not, of course, use the word zombie, and she described the disease more from the psychological horror of a half-dead person wanting to infect you with what was killing it than with any description of gore or gunfire. It seriously creeped me out, whereas modern zombies leave me thinking that filling out my tax returns might be an interesting and pleasant way to pass the time.
One writer who did something interesting with the shambling-rotting-flesh routine was Andre Norton (I think in Perilous Dreams) where the virus itself had a sort of intelligence that drove the decomposing victim to see out a new host. She did not, of course, use the word zombie, and she described the disease more from the psychological horror of a half-dead person wanting to infect you with what was killing it than with any description of gore or gunfire. It seriously creeped me out, whereas modern zombies leave me thinking that filling out my tax returns might be an interesting and pleasant way to pass the time.
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Date: 2011-01-08 09:17 pm (UTC)For example in the same movie, the zombie protagonist comes across a shooting range where all the targets are live zombies strung up by their ankles and he becomes enraged. He understands the injustice and cruelty and it sickens him. He finds particle board put up as fencing, and indicates for the butcher zombie to cut it down with his meat cleaver; the butcher acts surprised but he genuinely understands the gesture. It's really pretty amazing watching it dawn on them (we can make this joke aaaaaaaall night) and seeing them adapting to the surroundings, and reacting to this world all over again.
Ultimately, the movie is gore porn and there's a huge fight, though interestingly it's the rich, white, upperclass folk that sequestered themselves in a high security apartment building and left everyone else to fend for themselves on the street that get massacred. Then, the zombies pack up and move on. There's a moment of connection between the human and zombie protagonists over a distance, they make eye contact and agree to let one another live and let live, and the zombies move on to find themselves a home.
It's definitely still a gory movie with the typical zombie violence, but I really find the story and questions behind it incredibly fascinating.
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Date: 2011-01-08 10:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-01-09 12:16 am (UTC)