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Matthew Moses

Zombies in Cinema

Published on 1/5/07 in Movies
Why the undead serve as a symbol for death.

There is an underlying symbolism to zombie movies that took me until recently to understand the attraction audiences have with them. The zombies, the undead, are the personification of death itself: mindless, driven, eventually overpowering, lusting to devour life for no understandable reason. Zombie movies play out of the life cycle as the living do their best to not only survive but overcome coming doom. Yet, the odds are always against the living. Life is fragile, limited, and when faced with destruction, secluded. Life clings to life when death approaches.

But the numbers keep growing against our protagonists, emblematic of the aging process. These undead multiply one by one almost imperceptibly until they overtake us like each day of our lives, the future maturing into the present until it rots into the past as we progress from youth to old age. We wonder how much time passes us by surrounding us with memories of lost days much as our protagonists wonder how all these creatures came to be. Those days threaten to suffocate us, smother us beneath their legion of numbers. The past is merely the present trying to bury us.

We are drawn to these tales not simply because of man's attraction to violence and destruction but also to perceive an attempt at immortality. We fear the dead for we know that is our future destiny. We love to flirt with the inevitable, with oblivion, for it makes life taste so much sweeter. We realize what we have when we are threatened with losing all that we possess. In these tales are lessons deeper than any pulp plot.

Seeing zombie flicks from this perspective, it makes them all the more enjoyable; when done right. Certain masters understand how these stories can reach into our souls. Gore, blood, and death for its own sake is worthless. We don't need heroes blasting away comically with machine guns with man overcoming all with ease. We don't want to see death rendered blasted meat. Deep down, we know such is impossible. As valiantly as we all struggle, eventually death shall overcome us. Grim tales, of desperation and hope against the hopeless, are what make these tales entertaining, moving, and blessed in the realm of horror movies.

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Okay, what has always mystified me about movie zombies, and I am, admittedly, old school, i.e. Night of the Living Dead, is why are they so easy to kill? Shouldn't the mere fact that they survived death make them, I don't know, sort of superhuman? Yet, for example, in NOTLD, all that was needed was a clean shot to the head...or to chop them up. Where's the challenge? Written on 3/5/07
See, the beauty of it is that every time you think you defeat death it just pops up again. For every zombie killed in NOTLD there are five more. Death is inescapable. But as to the real world problem of something dead dying, Return of the Living Dead solved that by making the zombies unkillable. The only way to completely destroy them was to completely destroy them. Otherwise they kept coming at you even in pieces. And if you haven't seen Return of the Living Dead, get the hell out there and buy a copy! Written on 3/5/07

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