@JoscelynTransient@chaosfem.tw
The way you can tell I am feeling better finally is that Iโve switched from re-watching a comfort show to binging a series of campy horror films.
Tonightโs series: Return of the Living Dead.
For those that donโt know, Night of the Living Dead by George Romero and John Russo both invented the modern zombie as monster as opposed to occult slave and accidentally fell into public domain due to a flub in the printing of the original reels that left off the copyright symbol (yes, it really used to be that easy).
Well, George Romero built off this series with Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead - movies with rich political analysis, horror, and pathos. John Russo on the other hand, decided to double down on campy and frankly silly version with the Return of the Living Dead series (with OโBannon of Alien and Total Recall fame directing and writing the screenplay of the first).
While the tone of these quickly becomes slapstick, they are almost darker if taken seriously. While Romeroโs ghouls are slow and shambling, and rise from some unknown contagion (or because โthere is no more room in hellโ as one character posits), Russoโs zombies are caused by a government chemical weapon. Furthermore, they move fast, can speak and have some intelligence, and do not die when their brain is destroyed or body is dismembered. And the militaryโs response is usually to use a nuclear bomb to wipe the infected area clean. By the second movie, it appears electrocution can kill the zombies, but thatโs it.
So hereโs to giggling at zombies moaning โBRAAAAAIIIINNNNSSSSโ while the existential horror sinks in of being unable to die and be cogent enough to feel your flesh rot.
@JoscelynTransient@chaosfem.tw
By the third Return of the Living Dead, no one who was part of the first two was involved. I am sure this bodes well for its quality ๐
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