- Joined
- Apr 17, 2020
As Spookyween draws near I find myself watching, listening to, and thinking about zombie movies more and more. The conclusion that I have come to is that the genre appears to have been eating nothing but downs syndrome brains for the last couple decades.
Let's talk about clichés and tropes. I don't know when the world collectively decided that the reason for a zombie invasion needed to be some sort of "infection" or "disease", but I'd really like to see a lot more creativity in the future of the zombie genre. Maybe more films where the cause of the undead is completely unknown to the audience and the characters or subtly hinted at being possibly supernatural in origin, if only to add an element of mystique. The original two Romero films did a decent job of this with mentions of wild things like Venusian radiation brought back from a space probe to voodoo and just all sorts of these little "suggestions" at what could be causing the dead to rise from their graves. That would be a great start to heal the damage that has been done to this genre. But it might be for nothing. It is possible we have already reached Peak Z.
1986's Return of the Living Dead (my favorite film by far) already took zombies in the coolest possible direction by making them goddamned invincible and giving them the perfect level of dramatic and comedic intelligence. This is the film that had the very first instance of zombies moaning "braiiiins", after all. The cause of the reanimation in this particular film was a mysterious chemical developed by the United States government known as 2-4-5 Trioxin, and it remains one of my favorite explanations of zombification that has been given in a film so far. All of the exposition in this film is handled perfectly, from how the action is kicked off, to the buildup of each act in the story, all of it. The reason for zombies eating the brains of the living is understood while remaining barely explained; in the movie, a captive zombie comments that "it hurts to be dead", and eating the brain "makes the pain go away". A living brain is packed with chemicals like oxytocin, serotonin and norepinephrine, along with many others that get released in massive quantities upon severe trauma or death. The zombie brain lacks these chemicals, because it is dead. The movie trusts the intelligence of its audience to realize that the zombies have a real legitimate reason for running around and screaming, killing humans to eat their brains, without actually explaining anything. It is a brilliant and simple and perfect piece of storytelling.
Contrast this with any scene from a modern day zombie film and the results are shameful.
The biggest problem I have with the disease or "infection" angle (I absolutely hate hearing zombies referred to as "the infected" it is just so tired) becoming the most widely accepted and even expected cause of a zombie attack is that, as a writer, you immediately paint yourself into an extremely predictable corner and lose immense amounts of potential for your story. The films suffer as a result. You can't have a character become bitten or wounded by a zombie anymore without the audience expecting them to turn into one of the undead, which limits you in a dramatic sense. This trope was born in 1978's Dawn of the Dead with the character of Roger, even though it wasn't explicitly stated that it was because of some special zombie viral "infection". Nevertheless, because of this one scene almost every zombie movie since Dawn has included almost these exact same beat-for-beat predictable items within their script...as soon as something happens in a modern day zombie movie, you know exactly where it is going to lead. This simply won't do. The Resident Evil game series treated "disease zombies" the best in my opinion, with 28 Days Later being my second choice for this unfortunately overused archetype. Resident Evil movies? as far as I'm concerned, they have never made any.
Mystery is one of the most crucial components of really good horror, and in an era where Hollywood overexplains everything, the concept of mystique has basically been put to death. Every franchise now requires reams upon reams of autistic "lore" and fandom-related junk to go along with it, usually in some document that gets conveniently "leaked" to the press. Modern "horror" movies in general are typically nothing more than the same dumbass widemouth ghost jumpscare nonsense over and over and over. But I don't have to tell any of you how pozzed the movie industry is. This is a rant about fictional monsters, not real ones.
I obviously haven't seen every zombie movie ever released and it is even less likely that I will have seen something if it was made recently. I have only seen bits and pieces of The Walking Dead. I liked some of what I saw, but the rest fell too far into "modern show aesthetic" territory for me. But that's why I made this thread, for us to talk about movies. Maybe there is a modern zombie movie I missed that is actually good. Is there a zombie movie that has been made recently that you like? Do you think you have an answer to the limits that these insufferable Hollywood faggots have placed upon this great genre? My vision for the revival is a very simple, low dialogue, dark and chaotic event that comes off as realistic and believable as possible without venturing into the realm of something dumb and gimmicky like "found footage" (no thank you). I think there is another good zombie movie in our future, but it's gonna have to be something really special.
I leave you with wishes to enjoy your Halloween and, please, if you haven't seen Return of the Living Dead yet, you need to go watch it immediately. Maybe one of you will finally be able to figure out what in gods name this thing is supposed to be:


t. Cats
Let's talk about clichés and tropes. I don't know when the world collectively decided that the reason for a zombie invasion needed to be some sort of "infection" or "disease", but I'd really like to see a lot more creativity in the future of the zombie genre. Maybe more films where the cause of the undead is completely unknown to the audience and the characters or subtly hinted at being possibly supernatural in origin, if only to add an element of mystique. The original two Romero films did a decent job of this with mentions of wild things like Venusian radiation brought back from a space probe to voodoo and just all sorts of these little "suggestions" at what could be causing the dead to rise from their graves. That would be a great start to heal the damage that has been done to this genre. But it might be for nothing. It is possible we have already reached Peak Z.
1986's Return of the Living Dead (my favorite film by far) already took zombies in the coolest possible direction by making them goddamned invincible and giving them the perfect level of dramatic and comedic intelligence. This is the film that had the very first instance of zombies moaning "braiiiins", after all. The cause of the reanimation in this particular film was a mysterious chemical developed by the United States government known as 2-4-5 Trioxin, and it remains one of my favorite explanations of zombification that has been given in a film so far. All of the exposition in this film is handled perfectly, from how the action is kicked off, to the buildup of each act in the story, all of it. The reason for zombies eating the brains of the living is understood while remaining barely explained; in the movie, a captive zombie comments that "it hurts to be dead", and eating the brain "makes the pain go away". A living brain is packed with chemicals like oxytocin, serotonin and norepinephrine, along with many others that get released in massive quantities upon severe trauma or death. The zombie brain lacks these chemicals, because it is dead. The movie trusts the intelligence of its audience to realize that the zombies have a real legitimate reason for running around and screaming, killing humans to eat their brains, without actually explaining anything. It is a brilliant and simple and perfect piece of storytelling.
Contrast this with any scene from a modern day zombie film and the results are shameful.
The biggest problem I have with the disease or "infection" angle (I absolutely hate hearing zombies referred to as "the infected" it is just so tired) becoming the most widely accepted and even expected cause of a zombie attack is that, as a writer, you immediately paint yourself into an extremely predictable corner and lose immense amounts of potential for your story. The films suffer as a result. You can't have a character become bitten or wounded by a zombie anymore without the audience expecting them to turn into one of the undead, which limits you in a dramatic sense. This trope was born in 1978's Dawn of the Dead with the character of Roger, even though it wasn't explicitly stated that it was because of some special zombie viral "infection". Nevertheless, because of this one scene almost every zombie movie since Dawn has included almost these exact same beat-for-beat predictable items within their script...as soon as something happens in a modern day zombie movie, you know exactly where it is going to lead. This simply won't do. The Resident Evil game series treated "disease zombies" the best in my opinion, with 28 Days Later being my second choice for this unfortunately overused archetype. Resident Evil movies? as far as I'm concerned, they have never made any.
Mystery is one of the most crucial components of really good horror, and in an era where Hollywood overexplains everything, the concept of mystique has basically been put to death. Every franchise now requires reams upon reams of autistic "lore" and fandom-related junk to go along with it, usually in some document that gets conveniently "leaked" to the press. Modern "horror" movies in general are typically nothing more than the same dumbass widemouth ghost jumpscare nonsense over and over and over. But I don't have to tell any of you how pozzed the movie industry is. This is a rant about fictional monsters, not real ones.
I obviously haven't seen every zombie movie ever released and it is even less likely that I will have seen something if it was made recently. I have only seen bits and pieces of The Walking Dead. I liked some of what I saw, but the rest fell too far into "modern show aesthetic" territory for me. But that's why I made this thread, for us to talk about movies. Maybe there is a modern zombie movie I missed that is actually good. Is there a zombie movie that has been made recently that you like? Do you think you have an answer to the limits that these insufferable Hollywood faggots have placed upon this great genre? My vision for the revival is a very simple, low dialogue, dark and chaotic event that comes off as realistic and believable as possible without venturing into the realm of something dumb and gimmicky like "found footage" (no thank you). I think there is another good zombie movie in our future, but it's gonna have to be something really special.
I leave you with wishes to enjoy your Halloween and, please, if you haven't seen Return of the Living Dead yet, you need to go watch it immediately. Maybe one of you will finally be able to figure out what in gods name this thing is supposed to be:


t. Cats