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Arts & Culture

You Can't Keep a Good Zombie Down

Pani Musquiz carries his presidential campaign sign at World Zombie Walk. (Beth Accomando)

Pani Musquiz: Zombies gather over here.

Beth: I'm down here in the Gaslamp Quarter and I'm with the World Zombie Walk and I'm here trying to find some undead willing to talk about zombies. So what makes zombies so endearing?

Niki Ferris: Everyone loves zombies, whether or not you know it. Everyone loves a good gory horror flick, seeing people getting eaten alive. I think just the thrill of knowing that it's possible is what makes them endearing. We're all really afraid of them by the way.
World Zombie Walk's San Diego event organizer Jennifer Musquiz. (Beth Reno)
Beth: And tell me what this is all about then?

Jennifer Musquiz: This is in celebration of World Zombie Day and there's over 50 zombie walk groups around the world right now who today and yesterday are doing Zombie Walks to promote World Zombie Day and to bring attention to world hunger and benefit their local food banks.

Beth: Why are zombies appropriate for this?

Jennifer: Because we care. Zombies have big hearts we may not have brains but they have big hearts.
Zombie Angelica Aguilar (Beth Reno)
Beth: What are you guys going to do?

Angelica Aguilar: We usually start by this trolley station here by the Gaslamp and we just shamble moaning, dragging our feet up to Horton Plaza. Sometimes we have fake victims. So we'll have someone just walking around and in their normal clothes and they'll have some sort of marker on them like a red X on their shirt or something and we'll all attack them. They'll scream and we'll spray them with blood and then they join us as an undead.

Beth: And what do you like about zombies?

Pani Musquiz: Zombies are an open slate for the fears of people in the United States. You can put anything onto them, like in the 50s, zombies were caused by nuclear radiation; 60s, 70s and 80s, it was pollution; and nowadays with a lot of movies it's with disease. So it's just an open slate for fears of society.

Angelica Aguilar: I love that they seem like such a simple creature, they are just mindless things that want to go eat flesh but you can do so much with them, George Romero especially has these great social commentaries using zombies and his movies have so much depth to them about socio-political events, and socio-economic events it's amazing that he can do that just using zombies. And I love that about them.

Alyssa Kovacs: I love the way they walk, the way they act, just the fact that they walk so slow but always catch up with you, and always get you.
World Zombie Walk attracted upwards of a hundred undead (Beth Accomando)
Pani Musquiz: All right listen up...

Jennifer Musquiz: The guidelines... please walk slow this is not 28 Days Later , they are not zombies. It is true, 28 Days Later is not a zombie movie, it is a farce of a zombie movie so we walk slow, we are actual zombies. Again, no accosting people, don't reach over the barriers, otherwise have fun. [cheers]
Well how could you not have fun hanging out with a bunch of reanimated corpses? I don't know what it is about those lumbering, flesh-eating bumpkins that I find so endearing but from White Zombie to Zombie Strippers I love them all. The recent Shaun of the Dead touches on some of their appeal when one of the characters tries to instruct the others on how to act like a zombie.

Act like a zombie... Shaun of the Dead (Rogue Pictures)

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Shaun of the Dead clip
Diane: Okay let's all shake out, nice and limber. Now take another look at the way he moves, very limp, almost like sleepwalking. Look at the face, it's vacant with the hint of sadness, like a drunk who lost a bet.

Ah yes that hint of sadness. Zombies are like a faded memory of what it's like to be human; they used to be us and sometimes we sense they are trying to be like us again as when the zombies make a pilgrimage back to the shopping mall in George A. Romero's 1978 Dawn of the Dead.

George A. Romero's 1978 Dawn of the Dead (UFDC)

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Dawn of the Dead clip
Francine: They're still here.
Stephen: They're after us. They know we're still in here.
Peter: They're after the place. They don't know why, they just remember. Remember that they want to be in here.
Francine: What the hell are they?
Peter: They're us, that's all. There's no more room in hell.
Stephen: What?
Peter: Something my granddaddy used to tell us. You know Macumba? Voodoo? Granddad was a priest in Trinidad, he used to tell us when there's no more room in hell the dead will walk the earth.

I love the elegant simplicity of that explanation. Nothing else is needed. Plus the reference to voodoo is also appropriate says author Glenn Kay. Kay recently completed the Zombie Movies: The Ultimate Guide .

GLENN KAY: Initially it came from Haitian folklore and the zombies were mindless, soulless, slow moving corpses raised from the dead through the bidding of a voodoo master. White Zombie was the first film to use the word zombie in the title and to feature characters referred to as zombies and adapt very loosely the Haitian zombie folklore.

Bela Lugosi revamps his Dracula performance to play a zombie master in White Zombie (United Artists)

White Zombie clip
Man: Why did you drive like that you fool we might have been killed?
Driver: Worse than that monsieur, we might have been caught.
Man: Caught? By whom? The men you spoke to?
Driver: They are not men, monsieur, they are dead bodies.
Man: Dead?
Driver: Yes monsieur, zombies, the living dead, corpses taken from their grave who are made to work in sugar mills and fields at night.

These early voodoo influenced zombie films had an exotic flavor and a creepy atmosphere. Classics from the 30s and 40s include The Walking Dead and I Walked with a Zombie . More recent films also returned to this voodoo theme says Glenn Kay.

"Don't bury me, I'm not dead." Bill Pullman in Wes Craven's The Serpent and the Rainbow (Universal)

GLENN KAY: I really liked a film from the 80s called The Serpent and the Rainbow which I thought did a really good job right up till last 5 minutes of spinning the whole Haitian zombie culture and doing a very realistic job of just basically showing that these were just drugs that brought on a lethargic, kind of comatose state and often hallucinations and that's all it really.

And because drugs are shown as the basis for inducing a zombie-like state a big American corporation is interested in getting them.

The Serpent and the Rainbow - clip
Executive: What do you know about zombification?
Dennis: Pardon me?
Executive: Zombification. The process of making zombies, the living dead.
Dennis: Just what I've seen on the late show.

GLENN KAY: The success of the zombie is that it's kind of a personality free creature and it's really adaptable. So you'll see all through the history of zombie films that they are used for an analogy for bigger ideas. I mean going back to the 50s, there are a lot of movies about dead people controlled by space men who want to take over the world and there's a real strong link to the Cold War and communism. And yeah the recent films that deal with viruses... I actually talked to a crew member from the 28 Days and 28 Weeks Later and he told me that all they did was they took a zombie and took merged it with an Ebola virus.
28 Days Later offers infected people not zombies (Fox Searchlight)

The mention of 28 Days Later brings up a contentious point for true zombie fans -infected people. A true zombie is a lethargic undead creature that feeds on human flesh. The creatures in 28 Days Later are not really undead zombies but rather people plagued with a virus. Glenn Kay elaborates on the infected person.

28 Days Later clip
Selena: It was a virus, an infection. You didn't need a doctor to tell you that. It was the blood, there was something in the blood. By the time they tried to evacuate the city it was already too late. The infection was everywhere. The army blockades were overrun and that's when the exodus started. The day before the TV and radio stopped broadcasting there were reports of infection in Paris and New York.

Glenn Kay elaborates on the infected person.

GLENN KAY: They are living humans infected with a virus but what I decided was if the zombie infection, what I called the zombie infection, was incurable and that it transformed its victims into the same kind of mindless soulless creatures seen in the zombies films of decades past then I would keep them.

Kay grants these infected people zombie status because the films tap into many of the zombie elements from the craving for human flesh to the socially conscious themes underlying the horror. That social consciousness is something that George A. Romero brought to the genre in 1968 with his seminal film Night of the Living Dead .

The one that started it all... George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead (Image Ten)

Night of the Living Dead clip
Reporter: The unburied dead are coming back to life and seeking human victims.

Romero didn't invent zombies but he did create a lasting cinematic mythology for them says Hostel director Eli Roth.

Eli Roth: George Romero created the zombie. He wrote the rules. Shoot it in the head. If it bites you, you get infected, the dead coming back to life. George made all that stuff up and people it is lore. That is fact.

Shaun of the Dead clip
Reporter: The attackers can be stopped by removing the head or destroying the brain. I'll repeat that by removing the head or destroying the brain.
Zombies may be working on limited brain cells but not Romero. He has repeatedly delivered fun, cleverly conceived splatter fests with a message says author Glenn Kay.

GLENN KAY: His films definitely had a really strong social consciousness that and that was the problem with all the imitators, they missed that and that was a really important thing. Because the subtext is what's so fascinating in Romero's movies and that's why they are still popular is because you can go back and see them again and again and get more out of it than just a staggering zombie.

And that's why the recent Shaun of the Dead was so successful. Star and co-writer Simon Pegg says he and director Edgar Wright wanted to pay tribute to Romero's zombies.

Simon Pegg and Nick Frost deal with a zombie invasion in the brilliant Shaun of the Dead (Rogue Pictures)

SIMON PEGG: It is close to George Romero's theme because our zombies are like his, they're slow and they're allegorical and yeah we kind of wanted to keep that spirit that George Romero started off which is to be, which is to use them to as he did with Dawn with consumerism, and Day which I think was vivisection and stuff like that and use them as a metaphor.

EDGAR WRIGHT: That's the thing, the zombies meant different things in different eras we always said our zombies are a metaphor for apathy it's kind of like the great plague is laziness, so it was like the zombies represent sloth.

Shaun of the Dead clip
Zombie groans
Ed: What do you think we should do?
Shaun: Have a sit down.
But you can also find mindless zombie flicks like The Return of the Living Dead . The innovation here was that the zombies only wanted to feast on human brains.

Return of the Living Dead had zombies that hungered only for human brains (Orion)

GLENN KAY: The big brains movie is Return of the Living Dead and that is more of a satire as well and it's people just people taking the zombie and deciding we're going to do something different so our zombies are going to specialize in eating brains. (:33)

Return of the Living Dead clip
Mortician: Why do you eat people?
Zombie: Not people, brains.
Mortician: Why brains only?
Zombie: Yes, the pain.
Mortician: Eating brains, how does that make you feel?
Zombie: It makes the pain go away.

Kay places Return of the Living Dead on his top ten of zombie films but it comes after Dawn of the Dead, Night of the Living Dead, Shaun of the Dead and the oft overlooked Day of the Dead.

GLENN KAY: It's a bleak movie it's the third in the Romero series, it follows Dawn and it came out in '85. And again it's a really claustrophobic setting and it creates a really paranoid, claustrophobic vibe. But it features some great villains. As far as zombie characters there's a character called Bub in it who's very important he's one of the most famous and sympathetic zombies, he's actually quite sweet.

The lovable Bub from Day of the Dead (UFDC)

Day of the Dead clip
Doctor: I call him Bub. That's what the club fellows used to call my father. Bub's been responding so well lately I've decided to let him live. Well is he alive or dead? That's the question these days isn't it. Well let's say that I continue to let him exist. Hello Bub. Here are some toys for you. Some nice things for you to play with, you remember them from before, from before.

And Bub may represent the next stage of zombie evolution -the trainable zombie. Romero touched on this in Land of the Dead as well. In that film the zombies started to pick up the vestiges of their old lives.

Land of the Dead (Universal)

Land of the Dead clip
Man: They're trying to be us.
Riley: No they used to be us, learning how to be us again.
Man: I don't know how those things got up and walking but there's a big difference between us and them. They're dead.

So who knows where the zombie film will take us next.

GLENN KAY: Yeah it just depends on whatever our next big fear is who knows there might be Wall Street Zombies in the next few months or it just depends what happens to scare people at a particular point in history.

The good news is that zombie master George A. Romero is already shooting his next zombie film and Kay served as an extra on the set.

GLENN KAY: He's shooting a new movie up in Canada it doesn't have an official title yet but everybody there is calling it Blank of the Dead.

Oh the possibilities.

Music out: Zombi by Goblin