Zombies: The Aunt Sally's Of Horror
All iconic horror creatures have a deep seated symbolic value if they are to endure the fickle tastes of the mass media. So where does the Zombie fit in ?
I consider the Zombie to be the most humble of beasts; they can hardly be romanticized like ghosts, and vampire's ( I cant see any shirtless Zombies running around in Twilight ); They have none of the Werewolves latent power ( i consider the hulk to be a werewolfesque, in that respect ); And they are rather mundane when compared to an Alien being.
The Zombie began as the hapless victims of a Voodoo sorcerers, and in Haitian folklore the sorcerers were the source of fear, not there unfortunate relatives pulled from there graves . Despite getting increasingly violent and appropriating the Ghoul's taste for human flesh, the zombie has retained its victim status. In modern mythology, due to the success of Romero's ' Dawn of the dead ', the Zombie has become the favorite of redknecks and gun freak's, who have found the perfect vessel for there power fantasies; The zombie has become like one of Tolkien's orc's, a thing you can kill without guilt or prohibition.
So what makes a Zombie scary?. I believe that the secret is found in the sociological aspect, rather like the serial killer mythology. The scariest part of Dawn of the dead, which is the best undead film made by far, comes early; the Zombie is not supernatural here, but a product of the Ghetto, a failure of society. The cannibal myth has been around for a long time; It is something that some historians believe was not an uncommon practice amongst primitive people in time's of want. Cannibalism is probably the worst act that we can imagine others, or ourselves, indulging in; It represents a person or society at its most degraded and destructive.
If anyone has there own thought's about the Zombie, or disagree with mine, lets hear you.
All iconic horror creatures have a deep seated symbolic value if they are to endure the fickle tastes of the mass media. So where does the Zombie fit in ?
I consider the Zombie to be the most humble of beasts; they can hardly be romanticized like ghosts, and vampire's ( I cant see any shirtless Zombies running around in Twilight ); They have none of the Werewolves latent power ( i consider the hulk to be a werewolfesque, in that respect ); And they are rather mundane when compared to an Alien being.
The Zombie began as the hapless victims of a Voodoo sorcerers, and in Haitian folklore the sorcerers were the source of fear, not there unfortunate relatives pulled from there graves . Despite getting increasingly violent and appropriating the Ghoul's taste for human flesh, the zombie has retained its victim status. In modern mythology, due to the success of Romero's ' Dawn of the dead ', the Zombie has become the favorite of redknecks and gun freak's, who have found the perfect vessel for there power fantasies; The zombie has become like one of Tolkien's orc's, a thing you can kill without guilt or prohibition.
So what makes a Zombie scary?. I believe that the secret is found in the sociological aspect, rather like the serial killer mythology. The scariest part of Dawn of the dead, which is the best undead film made by far, comes early; the Zombie is not supernatural here, but a product of the Ghetto, a failure of society. The cannibal myth has been around for a long time; It is something that some historians believe was not an uncommon practice amongst primitive people in time's of want. Cannibalism is probably the worst act that we can imagine others, or ourselves, indulging in; It represents a person or society at its most degraded and destructive.
If anyone has there own thought's about the Zombie, or disagree with mine, lets hear you.
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