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More then Zombieland
Author: wickedpam    Date: 10/07/2009 12:39:21

It’s October, the time when the air turns crisp, the leaves change color and the dead walk the night and day. I love this time of year. I’ve loved scary movies, books and TV shows since….jeez….I think I saw the Creature Double Feature on the UHF station when we lived in the Philly suburbs. Those horror movies are a far cry from the blood porn most movies of this genre are today. Vampires worked themselves into the culture and become sexy instead of scary…well maybe that hasn’t changed to some extent (and I’m not counting Nostforatu). The un-killable serial killers like Jason, Freddie and Mike Myers all have pasts that we should be sympathetic too. And monsters have become computer generated and too big to take seriously, i.e. Cloverfield (which is a great movie but I’m not that scared of giant praying mantis from outer space).

There is one thing in horror movies, however, that has always made my skin crawl since I first saw it when MTV did its week of scary movies for Halloween back in the ‘80’s, that’s The Night of the Living Dead. I’m talking Zombies!!!!!!

While all other monsters ebb and flow in popularity it is the Zombies, no pun intended, live on. Story tellers use them to make varied social commentary on what they see in the world around them.

The Zombie Metaphor works so well for social commentary, because the horror conceit is that we see ourselves in the zombies. The ability to relate is amplified by the transition from the Living to the Dead, the Familiar to the Unfamiliar. As individuals, we cling to Life and want to stay part of that crowd. ……we see ourselves clinging to privileged lifestyles, meaningful forms of employment and living and a desire to retain our positions over those below us.

We fear waking up One Day and realizing that everything has changed. Everything we understood about ourselves is different and we are terrified about crossing the lines that define us and becoming something less than we are or could be.

That is a frightening thought indeed.

Brian Setton


George Romero, once a political filmmaker, has done this with serious accuracy since the late ‘60’s. Night of the Living Dead (1968), depending on who your talking to, range in topic from feminism to civil rights movement or the era to the Vietnam war and it being unwinnable. Dawn of the Dead (1978 & 2004) focused on our love of stuff. If people taking refuge from zombies in mall isn’t a metaphor for mass consumerism I don’t know what is. Day of the Dead (1985) and Land of the Dead are all about class warfare, the wealthy are safe and sound but it’s the poor that must fend for themselves with the zombie population. And while I haven’t seen Dairy of the Dead (2008) in researching I’ve learned it takes on the topic of fear mongering, how apropos during the last decade.

Other movies make us look at the idea that maybe we’re already living like zombies, Shaun of the Dead (2004) points out that we mindless talk on the phone and mindless watch TV, mindlessly go to work. We just trudge through our lives not really thinking for ourselves and that its only when we wake up and take control that we make a difference.

28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later looks at the fear global pandemics can cause. Fido takes on conformity. Homecoming drives home the point when American soldiers rise from the grave to vote out the president that sent them to war.

No matter what brushes we use to paint zombies with they are still seem to be one thing – they are the complexity that is us.

Zombies are easy stand-ins for our lesser selves. Essentially, zombies are reflections of who we are at our worst. Or best, depending on what glass you are viewing the metaphor through.

Eric Melin, Scene Stealers - October 26, 2008

 

32 comments (Latest Comment: 10/08/2009 12:34:20 by wickedpam)
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Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 13:07:53
Morning all.. hopefully today will be a little less busy and I can actually help get the post count here up.



Was looking at the stuff from last night a moment ago.. what in the heck at that painting?! It's worse than the godfather/scarface/sopranos one that you see at the mall art stores!

Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 13:13:13
Heard in reaction to the news that Rush Limbaugh plans to purchase an ownership stake in the St. Louis Rams..

Rush getting closer to his dream of owning 47 black men?
He doesn't care about all that, he just found out about all the painkillers they have.


Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 13:24:20
Morning



Blog is up

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 14:52:42
Did zombies break the blog?

Comment by TriSec on 10/07/2009 15:08:34
"The Thing" (circa 1982)



Scariest. Movie. Ever.





Comment by livingonli on 10/07/2009 15:21:03
Good morning everyone.



Back in college I took a history class which looked at film and context and what it said about times and events. The course covered from Birth of a Nation and our final papers were based on The Living Dead triliogy (Day was the last one at that point).

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 15:42:19
Morning you two



Horror movies have always had metephors or morals to go with them, hence the popularity of the real Grimm's Fairy Tales

Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 16:15:49
Comment by Random on 10/07/2009 16:24:19


Well, good for them.

Maybe they'll have Jesus beating Mary Magdalene for being a whore. Or some random queer.

Ahh the bible.

Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 16:33:56
Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 16:35:49
Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 16:40:57
Comment by livingonli on 10/07/2009 16:47:53
I remember when Bravo was still an arts channel they ran a series on Sunday afternoons based on the original versions of the fairy tales and not the Disneyfied versions of them that most kids here are exposed to.

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 16:58:33
Alright - there are just some days I can't take Thom.....

Comment by livingonli on 10/07/2009 17:09:17
What did Thom do since I am unable to listen right now

Comment by Random on 10/07/2009 17:12:57
She'll either beat them to death, bludgeon them do death...


Granted, Random's grasph of the english language is limited, but doesn't Beat and Bludgeon kind of mean the same thing?

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 17:15:45
Quote by livingonli:

What did Thom do since I am unable to listen right now






He didn't DO anything, his topics just can really pound in the negative and I can only take that for so long

Comment by Random on 10/07/2009 17:16:52
Quote by wickedpam:

Quote by livingonli:

What did Thom do since I am unable to listen right now






He didn't DO anything, his topics just can really pound in the negative and I can only take that for so long


Thom was always too much an intellectual for me.

Comment by Mondobubba on 10/07/2009 17:28:38






Ya know, that is one of the funniest damn things I have seen in awhile.

Comment by Mondobubba on 10/07/2009 17:32:30
Mala thank you for the zombie as metaphor blog today. Well done.

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 18:01:39
Quote by Random:

Quote by wickedpam:

Quote by livingonli:

What did Thom do since I am unable to listen right now






He didn't DO anything, his topics just can really pound in the negative and I can only take that for so long


Thom was always too much an intellectual for me.






True but I always learn lots - today, I just couldn't take it

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 18:02:02
Quote by Mondobubba:

Mala thank you for the zombie as metaphor blog today. Well done.




*curtseies* thank ya

Comment by TriSec on 10/07/2009 18:02:41
*sigh*



At least I have jazz.





Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 18:25:28
Quote by TriSec:

*sigh*



At least I have jazz.









things okay?

Comment by Scoopster on 10/07/2009 18:31:00
Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 19:42:22
Um Columbus didn't "found" the US dumbass

Comment by wickedpam on 10/07/2009 19:48:48
this guy is an idiot - Columbus stumbled onto the continent by accident, and he didn't even make it to the main land he was down in the islands - what he has to say in is diary means nothing really - in fact the Vikings found the continent first but this guys theory we should now be worshipping Odin and Thor

Comment by Random on 10/07/2009 23:38:58
Quote by wickedpam:

Um Columbus didn't "found" the US dumbass


wait...wait...explain dear wicked.

Comment by wickedpam on 10/08/2009 12:34:20
Quote by Random:

Quote by wickedpam:

Um Columbus didn't "found" the US dumbass


wait...wait...explain dear wicked.






It was just some idiot who called up Randi saying we were a Christian nation because of some diary entries by Columbus - he was a moron - that's all