Saturday 29 March 2014

Zombie or Not Zombie …? That is The Question.


As a writer of zombie fiction, a watcher of zombie movies, an organiser of zombie walks and an all round zombie fan, I’m considered by those who know me to be – deserved or not deserved – a bit of a zombie geek. That’s why a friend contacted me on Facebook recently, asking me to settle an argument that had been raging all day between him and his mum: In my opinion, do I class the ‘Rage’ infected victims in the 28 Days/Weeks films as zombies? His mum was adamant that they were while my friend disagreed. 


I knew he was hoping for a yes/no answer (and more specifically a ‘no’), but that was something I couldn’t give. In my zombie obsessed mind, the seemingly innocent question raised all sorts of problems. The first being: What is a zombie?
            If you type my friend’s question into Google you will get a wide response from those who firmly believe the rage infected victims are NOT zombies because they are living, rather than reanimated corpses that feed on flesh; those that DO consider them zombies because they attack the uninfected and pass on the virus; and those that just DON’T CARE (it’s just a movie ffs!).
            The image of the lumbering, brain munching Undead that we know as the zombie comes largely from the zombie king himself, George A Romero and his Living Dead series. Of course, zombies existed in movies and literature long before then, but it was Romero who brought the iconic image into the mainstream.


In 28 Days/Weeks Later, a virus called ‘Rage’ infects humans through blood and saliva. The infected are nothing like the classic Romero rotting, reanimated corpse zombies. In fact, they are not dead at all. Furthermore, they run, rather than shuffle, they are strong, rather than stiff and rotting, and instead of stopping to chow down on their victims’ brains, the rage infected like to bite for biting’s sake, for no other reason than to spread the virus. 


So with the biggest argument against the 28 Days/Weeks rage infected victims being termed as zombies is that they are not dead but infected by a virus, does that mean someone has to be dead in order to be a zombie?
The zombie’s roots go back to voodoo. The Haitian zombie has less to do with a witch doctor actually raising the dead, and more to do with a victim being rendered into a death-like state by the use of a powerful paralysis inducing drug. Once the drugged victim has been ‘raised from the dead’, they are kept in a zombie-like state by the use of further drugs, allowing the witch doctor to control the affected person. This is, after all, the premise of the 1932 movie White Zombie. Thought to be the first ever zombie movie, it tells the story of Madeleine who is drugged and turned into a zombie by a voodoo master, until she wakes up from her trance upon her captor’s death.  


A story that dominated the news a couple of years ago was that of ‘bath salts zombies’ where individuals under the influence of a synthetic drug similar to crystal meth, become crazed, flesh eating cannibals or, as the media revelled in calling them – zombies. Ever since the case in Miami in 2012 where homeless Ronald Poppo had part of his face bitten off by Rudy Eugene while Eugene was under the influence of bath salts, there has been a new wave of zombies in town … they are alive, they do not lumber, they do not munch brains. People were falling over themselves to term the Poppo/Eugene case, and the subsequent copy cat cases that followed as zombie attacks … so why do some people have a problem with calling the 28 Days/Weeks films zombie movies?


And what is wrong with playing with a genre? Richard Matheson’s 1954 novel I am Legend, that perhaps inspired Romero and his Living Dead series, is a ground breaking vampire tale that was way ahead of its time. While the novel’s hero, Neville, himself, refers to the creatures as vampires, they are nothing like the I’ll-bite-you-then-you-drink-some-of-my-blood-and-you’ll-be-a-vampire-too creatures that we’re used to from Dracula to The Lost Boys. In I am Legend, the vampirism is transmitted by a bacterium, one that Neville is immune to. Some of the vampires are dead, others are alive and infected and intent on killing humans and spreading the disease. Not so dissimilar to the ‘Rage’ virus in 28 Days/Weeks. But who are we to argue with Neville when he decides to call them vampires? He is, after all, the last human – it’s up to him what he calls them.
            Okay, so no one in 28 Days/Weeks refers to the victims as ‘zombies’, but no one in The Walking Dead has ever said the word ‘zombie’ either, instead sticking to the term ‘Walkers’. But we all agree that the show belongs in the zombie genre.


So, do I class the infected rage victims in 28 Days/Weeks as zombies? Yeah, I do. Just a different take on them. Matheson pushed boundaries to create a fresh spin on a genre. And if people don’t move a genre forward, play with it, do the unexpected, subvert it, what are we left with – something that is as dead and rotten as a … well, a zombie …?


 

Tuesday 4 March 2014

Blog of the Dead - Life First 5 Star Review



The first Amazon review for Blog of the Dead - Life is in and it's 5 Stars!

"As soon as i started i couldnt put it down. As soon as you have started reading you are back in the zombie infested dystopian world i came to love from the first book, blog of the dead. The characters feel more developed and you learn a bit more of their backstories. This funny, bloody, touching and surprising novel will keep you guessing what happens next, with twists and turns you won't see coming.
I whole heartedly hope book three is on its way soon. I would recommend to anyone who enjoys zombies and the perils that come with that world. Fantastic read ! 5 stars :)"


It's great to get feedback from readers and I always appreciate it when people take the time to write a review, so thank you Stevej105! To read the review on Amazon click here.