M. Morton
English 1010
November 4th, 2015
Run, Shoot, Reload, Repeat
Zombies. Hordes of zombies. Hordes of flesh eating, rotting, mindless zombies. These terrible creatures are just a shell of their former human selves gnawing on any living thing that crosses their path… and the fans cannot get enough of theses monsters. Ever since the introduction of these creatures in George Romero’s 1969 movie, “The Night of the Living
Dead,” people have fallen in love with the idea of a zombie apocalypse. An entire fandom has been built around them. The entertainment business has been happy to cater to this new obsession with movies, videogames, comic books, clothing, and even children’s toys.
The most recent addition to this fad has been the wildly successful series the “Walking …show more content…
In essence, “The Walking Dead” is an outrageous hyperbole of everyday life circumstances. It presents conundrums such as what to do when placed in traumatic situations. It also brings up inherently complex issues such as loyalty, loss, self-worth and regard for human life. “The
Walking Dead” challenges its audience to evaluate their feelings. Fans love this show because of thought provoking dilemmas buried within the intricate storyline.
Sometimes it is not comfortable to think about these situations but sometimes discomfort is good. Isn’t that what fantasy and science fiction is for? Isn’t the desired goal to learn from the story so that we might be better people? The one issue with “The Walking Dead” is that sometimes it seems to go on and on with no clear imminent ending. After all, it’s not like
Superman can fly in and save the day by ridding the world of the “biters.” Inevitably, it seems there is no way out of the nightmare. But perhaps there lies the true metaphor to reality. As zombies cannot be simply eradicated from the earth, people cannot simply escape from their problems. Instead, they must fight to live good, honorable lives… and take out as many zombies as they can along the