Still don't understand why that automatically makes it a train wreck, official or otherwise.
A general comparison likely to the Walking Dead, it's huge popularity and also there has been so much bad press about this film thus far.
Still don't understand why that automatically makes it a train wreck, official or otherwise.
The Zombie behavior in that clip appears to suggest them working together strategically as a group, which would inolve the Zombies being intelligent. Intelligent Zombies using strategy, goes overboard for some of us. Zombies should be driven by hunger and instinct, and without the ability to strategize
Have you ever read Wet Work by Philip Nutman? It has zombies that are like that. Some of them are the standard slow shuffling Romero type, some are the fast Zack Snyder type, and some of them retain all of their intelligence and personality and (hunger for living flesh notwithstanding) are basically indistinguishable from the living. They can think, talk, drive cars, put on new clothes, organize ambushes using guns, etc. Those smart zombies even take over the government, and rename it the United States of Hell...
Nope, haven't read it, but, smart Zombies (Even Bud from Day of the Dead, who barely has any smarts) have never appealed to me, other than in Fido where they are used comedically as slaves. I personally didn't say this movie is officially a train wreck because of the smart Zombies, but, the more information that comes out, the more concerned I am this isn't a movie I'm interested in.The Zombie behavior in that clip appears to suggest them working together strategically as a group, which would inolve the Zombies being intelligent. Intelligent Zombies using strategy, goes overboard for some of us. Zombies should be driven by hunger and instinct, and without the ability to strategize
Have you ever read Wet Work by Philip Nutman? It has zombies that are like that. Some of them are the standard slow shuffling Romero type, some are the fast Zack Snyder type, and some of them retain all of their intelligence and personality and (hunger for living flesh notwithstanding) are basically indistinguishable from the living. They can think, talk, drive cars, put on new clothes, organize ambushes using guns, etc. Those smart zombies even take over the government, and rename it the United States of Hell...
Actually, I can think of a scenario where that would be justified. If the zombies were animated by a virus or nanotech that operates as a collective organism to run an individual body, then they could theoretically communicate between bodies and a group of zombies could operate as one organism. I don't think that approach would be appropriate for World War Z, but it would be an interesting idea to pursue in another venue.The Zombie behavior in that clip appears to suggest them working together strategically as a group, which would inolve the Zombies being intelligent. Intelligent Zombies using strategy, goes overboard for some of us. Zombies should be driven by hunger and instinct, and without the ability to strategize
Calling something a zombie, doesn't make it so. Whether they be slow and shuffling, or fast and aggressive. Risen from the grave, infected with an exotic contagion or ensorcelled by a Voodoo witchdoctor; a zombie's inherent mindlessness has consistently been it's defining characteristic.
What you're describing is more along the lines of the classic pulp cannibalistic mutant. A modern interpretation of the old cultural fear of the savage. A human threat, not a monster in human form.
Calling something a zombie, doesn't make it so. Whether they be slow and shuffling, or fast and aggressive. Risen from the grave, infected with an exotic contagion or ensorcelled by a Voodoo witchdoctor; a zombie's inherent mindlessness has consistently been it's defining characteristic.
What you're describing is more along the lines of the classic pulp cannibalistic mutant. A modern interpretation of the old cultural fear of the savage. A human threat, not a monster in human form.
Zombies are whatever the novel (or film, or TV series) says they are. Nothing more, nothing less.
Calling something a zombie, doesn't make it so. Whether they be slow and shuffling, or fast and aggressive. Risen from the grave, infected with an exotic contagion or ensorcelled by a Voodoo witchdoctor; a zombie's inherent mindlessness has consistently been it's defining characteristic.
What you're describing is more along the lines of the classic pulp cannibalistic mutant. A modern interpretation of the old cultural fear of the savage. A human threat, not a monster in human form.
Zombies are whatever the novel (or film, or TV series) says they are. Nothing more, nothing less.
Slow moving zombies never made sense to me that they could successfully overrun the entire world including the national guard and the military. Also, too many people in the US own a firearm for even a mass number of slow zombies to overtake a population center IMO.
So, faster zombies are much more believable as a plague that over takes the majority of the population.
Oh, yea, sure that would be like several occurrences of a Raver in The Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, a swarm of insects, a swarm of rats, and I believe another similar type swarm as well, but, yea, that's not a normal Zombie ApocalypseActually, I can think of a scenario where that would be justified. If the zombies were animated by a virus or nanotech that operates as a collective organism to run an individual body, then they could theoretically communicate between bodies and a group of zombies could operate as one organism. I don't think that approach would be appropriate for World War Z, but it would be an interesting idea to pursue in another venue.The Zombie behavior in that clip appears to suggest them working together strategically as a group, which would inolve the Zombies being intelligent. Intelligent Zombies using strategy, goes overboard for some of us. Zombies should be driven by hunger and instinct, and without the ability to strategize
This looks fine. I can't fathom why fans of The Avengers would complain about another CGI laden popcorn flick.
As for intelligent Zombies, what was the general opinion about the Zombie character in the BBC version of Being Human? That's the only case of a serious intelligent Zombie that I know of.
As for intelligent Zombies, what was the general opinion about the Zombie character in the BBC version of Being Human? That's the only case of a serious intelligent Zombie that I know of.
I don't know about visual media but Terry Pratchett had intelligent zombies in his fantasy world. He flipped it round so that what made them alive was what was between their ears and the bodies were decrepit.
^Yeah, I was kind of surprised when I heard he was doing this.
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