I recall reading on a wiki Doctor Who has done comic crossovers in the past.... I can't remember the comic character, but know it has happened.
I thought about Startrek, but Startrek has teleporters, and phasers that can be adapted via replicators to whatever damn setting you want. You want to scare Picard, make him a substitute school teacher for troubled youth.
I am interested in this "base defence" idea of yours as a class of science fiction. That's mostly what zombies are.
My state of West Virginia is for reasons nobody else seems to grasp, the most addicted to zombie films and literature. Night of the Living Dead was filmed nearby where I live just over the border in Pennslyvania. People don't grasp that in The French and Indian Wars, Lord Dunmore's War, and American Revolution, Indian fighting styles in Western PA and the state we now fall Virginia very closely resembled Indian attacks on blockhouses and fortified houses. One day you get up, go out to farm, or hunt, then 30 Indians surround your house, surrounding it, and you flee inside. They didn't quite grasp how locking mechanisms worked, and not much as far as breech or siege equipment (they only just started experimenting with western style layouts of towns, and their traditional buildings not designed to keep determined people out physically, so they had a long learning curve to figuring it out). A lot of the stories parallel modern zombie stories- people watching for hours to days as people swarm outside. Door kept getting tested, weak spots. You shoot at them. Wait. More waiting. Once in a while, if you could spare someone, a runner sent out to neighboring community to warn, get help.
If you lose, your mutilated, killed, or scalped. Scalped = Eat Brain. Sometimes ritualized cannabalism, but not much. They like to torture people alive, gruesome, like watching people ripped alive by zombies.
The religion of that time was generally protestant, with medieval elements of witchcraft still present. Church of England, or German ideas. Many had a literally monistic view on the resurrection, that it was your dead body in the ground that would crawl up from the grave on judgment day.
That is why my area, in my personal belief, is so heavily addicted to zombie movies. I've researched it a hit, can't find any contradictory data. Yes, zombie stories go back farther in history, but that exact mix, the kind that makes a show like The Walking Dead, that's pretty close to our early history here. Sounds similar to your base defence concept. I'm thinking your thinking Star Ship Troopers 2? That's a castle keep, much bigger than a block house, but same basic idea.
You need to read Heron of Byzantium if your a writer. Unique ideas, one of his books focuses strictly on siegecraft. Endless ideas for a storyteller. Also Aeneas Tacitus, or Mo Tzo. If your interested in architecture, look at The Knights of Rhodes' fortifications on Rhodes.