Zombies 6 results

AMC Planning The Walking Dead Movie, Anna Shinoda To Write Script

After the finale of The Walking Dead's third season yesterday, Robert Kirkman has told MTV that ...

Dead Space 2: Space Zombies, Prepare to Meet Your Mower

Is there a place in mass entertainment for dismemberment, dementia, wails of anguish and the ...

My Zombie, Myself: Why Modern Life Feels Rather Undead

By CHUCK KLOSTERMAN December 3, 2010 NYTimes.com

ZOMBIES are a value stock. They are wordless and oozing and brain dead, but they’re an ever-expanding market with no glass ceiling. Zombies are a target-rich environment, literally and figuratively. The more you fill them with bullets, the more interesting they become. Roughly 5.3 million people watched the first episode of “The Walking Dead” on AMC, a stunning 83 percent more than the 2.9 million who watched the Season 4 premiere of “Mad Men.” This means there are at least 2.4 million cable-ready Americans who might prefer watching Christina Hendricks if she were an animated corpse.

Statistically and aesthetically that dissonance seems perverse. But it probably shouldn’t. Mainstream interest in zombies has steadily risen over the past 40 years. Zombies are a commodity that has advanced slowly and without major evolution, much like the staggering creatures George Romero popularized in the 1968 film “Night of the Living Dead.” What makes that measured amplification curious is the inherent limitations of the zombie itself: You can’t add much depth to a creature who can’t talk, doesn’t think and whose only motive is the consumption of flesh. You can’t humanize a zombie, unless you make it less zombie-esque. There are slow zombies, and there are fast zombies— that’s pretty much the spectrum of zombie diversity. It’s not that zombies are changing to fit the world’s condition; it’s that the condition of the world seems more like a zombie offensive. Something about zombies is becoming more intriguing to us. And I think I know what that something is.

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‘The Walking Dead’ Will Live On in a Second Season

Good news for undead zombies who consume the flesh of the living and the television viewers who love them: AMC said on Monday that it has officially ordered a second season of “The Walking Dead,” its original series adapted from the comic books written by Robert Kirkman about human survivors in a world overrun by the ambulatory deceased. (Catchy phrase, no?) ...

The Walking Dead Review: Exquisite Corpses

Are you team vampire or team zombie? It's easy to see why vampires have a pop-culture edge. They ...