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World War Z officially a train wreck

As I said, suspension of disbelief. As with any of this, you either "go with it" or you don't.
It doesn't work that way. I accept that zombies are possible because it is required of premise, just like I accept warp drive in Star Trek and that all the fat, stupid, working-class, infantile men in sitcoms have smoking hot wives.

I do not, in turn, have to accept any stupidity they throw in there just because the premise requires me to suspend disbelief about something else. If some seagulls in "The Birds" started shooting lasers out of their eyes or crows started exploding like grenades, it wouldn't be acceptable to just say "oh well, the birds were already pretty unrealistic." There is a line that cannot be crossed and still maintain a credible set of rules.


As I said, "suspension of disbelief", you either accept the idea or you don't. This particular line doesn't work for you.

I don't have a problem with it. And to engage in "realism" arguments against it, when one could engage in any number of "technobabbleiean" rationals for it, to me, is unnecessary.

You either accept this particular idea...or you don't.

I do. You don't. It is that simple. No one else is required to measure this according to your own gauge.

I would be ecstatic if this was the worst "problem" of this film, which it is plain it is not.
 
They still require their bodies to function, even if they don't care about pain. Acting as a nearly fluid swarm like that, they would be leaving a trail of limbs and gore behind them as they tore each other apart from getting tangled, squished, clawed at, etc.

Was there something shown to say this was not the case? Nothing on the scale seen in the trailer, but such things happens in stampedes. Like the one at Walmart on Black Friday.

Have enough people . . .
 
"internal consistency"
Yes, and consistency with the source material.

Also verisimilitude. What works for Star Trek doesn't work for Firefly which doesn't work for The Avengers which doesn't work for World War Z. Venhardi's example of The Birds is exactly right.
 
"internal consistency"
Yes, and consistency with the source material.

Also verisimilitude. What works for Star Trek doesn't work for Firefly which doesn't work for The Avengers which doesn't work for World War Z. Venhardi's example of The Birds is exactly right.


True. But there is also getting locked down so tight into a certain set of tropes that something can get stale and predictable.

Again, I've no problem with fast stacking zombies, and I'm willing to bet that the vast majority of the audience that will see WWZ won't have a problem with it, either.

The "problems" with this movie go far deeper, in that they seemingly have taken a great book and pretty much shat all over it, turning it into a big budget empty SFX spectacle. Something based on this book should be much more.

That said, I'm a huge fan of the book and have no problems seeing zombies with those attributes adapted to the novel.

If only that were the main issue.
 
Seeing Brad Pitt in one of those brainless action movies feels weird. How long has it been since he was in a truly awful movie? Ten years?
 
Who the hell is this Brad Pitt? Didn't he play some bit role in that movie about the shitty upstate NY city across the river from Albany in 2004? If so, I haven't seen him in a movie since.
 
The correct answer was: "Eleven years, Mirrorball Man, since The Mexican, in fact. Wow, your estimation was quite accurate and you are surprisingly attractive".
 
If some seagulls in "The Birds" started shooting lasers out of their eyes or crows started exploding like grenades, it wouldn't be acceptable to just say "oh well, the birds were already pretty unrealistic." There is a line that cannot be crossed and still maintain a credible set of rules.
:rommie: Well said.



You're thnking like someone who is familiar with Zombie lore. People would see their relatives sick, and try to help them and get bitten when it was unexpected.
At this point, there've been so many goddamn zombie movies, memes, fads, costumes and etc. that I can't decide what's more unrealistic, zombies or the notion of a contemporary society without zombie lore. As good as the Dawn of the Dead remake was, every time the characters showed that they'd never even heard of the concept of reanimated corpses, my suspension of disbelief was utterly shattered.
 
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