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Courting the undead: Assessing the appeal of zombie movies

The release of 28 Weeks Later..., the unimaginatively-titled sequel to director Danny Boyle's gritty horror 28 Days Later..., is perhaps an overdue response to the original's success. Boyle's original has become, in many ways, a seminal entry in the horror genre, although, notably, the ushering of a new chapter for the cinematic undead (or rather, 'Infected', as screenwriter Alex Garland would have it) as a source of serious horror, was not what the film initially drew attention for. The filmmakers apparently sought to draw attention to their relatively low budget by shooting only on semi-professional digital cameras. Then there was the film's opening spectacle of a deserted London, and the arresting image of Cillian Murphy's Jim, clad in hospital scrubs and clasping a carrier-bag, standing in bewilderment on an empty Westminster Bridge. As Jim soon discovers, London, and indeed the UK as a whole, has been evacuated in the aftermath of a savage plague viscerally referred to as Rage' which, upon transmission of infected blood, almost instantaneously strips victims of their humanity and turns them into rabid, demon-eyed, blood-vomiting monsters. It was a shocking vision amplified by the digital format, giving the impression that the end of the world was being filmed with footage blended from survivors on the run, and static CCTV cameras.

Just as George Romero critiqued America's involvement in Vietnam in 1968's Night of the Living Dead, and then satirized western consumerism a decade later in Dawn of the Dead, 28 Days Later arguably captured the 21st Century zeitgeist and became a product of its time. In the aftermath of 9/11, and in the months preceding the invasion of Iraq in 2003, the fear of weapons of mass destruction, chemical warfare and infection, dominated headlines across the western world. The Bush Administration insisted Saddam was stockpiling unpleasant chemicals in the Iraqi desert, and tabloids speculated on the likelihood of a terrorist dirty' bomb hitting London or New York. The Infected' of Boyle's British apocalypse capitalised on the fears fanning from this brave new world. Gone were the cumbersome, slow-moving undead of Romero's original visions; the Rage created aggressive, salivating victims who were fast on their feet, aimlessly sprinting and snarling in their tireless and instinctive search for flesh to feast upon.

For nearly two decades from the late 1980s, the zombie was effectively confined to the annals of cinematic ridicule,


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Courting the undead: Assessing the appeal of zombie movies

  • 1 of 15

    by Beth Laster

    When you picture a zombie flick, do you envision (perhaps literally) mindless entertainment? Do lurching, slow-movin... read more

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    by Court Moss

    I am a zombie movie freak; I can't get enough of them. In fact, when I'm watching one, I'm not even concerned about t... read more

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    by Can Tran

    In just about any horror movie, it seems that the use of zombies have been and still is appealing in most aspects of ... read more

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    by Richard Leigh

    A tale of blood, flesh and walking corpses; What's so appealing about zombie movies? For some years now I have had... read more

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Courting the undead: Assessing the appeal of zombie movies

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