I agree Bennis.
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
I really hate to break it to you but The Walking Dead IS about social issues and how humanity is affected under teh extreme duress of a apocalyptic event. So things like racism, sexism, childhood, relationships, etc etc are all represented in teh story lines. The story is more about the survivors than the actual zombies.bennisboy wrote:
Spoiler (highlight to read):-Sh1fty- wrote:
Spoiler (highlight to read):bennisboy wrote:
Spoiler (highlight to read):
My prediction is rick actually died, but was brought back to life by some variant of the virus that didn't affect his brain in the same way as everyone else (Or maybe he is immune to the bad effects of it). It would explain why Shane couldn't hear his heartbeat. It wouldn't be something so "mundane" as the kid isn't Rick's in a zombia apocalypse
So you don't think multiple M4s executing patients @ 150dB would somewhat mask the sound the heart makes? Rick wasn't on life support, when the machine went out with the power, his heart was still pumping quite well.
The doctor wouldn't whisper that she's pregnant to Rick. That would be a total let-down by the writers. Nobody wants to wait 9 months to hear something the doctor didn't have to hide. Not to mention the series would turn into a lame-ass soap opera.
Spoiler (highlight to read):
If it was Shane's kid then Rick wouldn't have gone on calmly as he did.
Except there was a lull in the shooting when he had his head to his chest. It would be a much better story if Rick was found to have some kind of immunity and needed to find someone that could produce a cure from his blood, than if it went "OMG wife is preggerz n the baby isn't mine, catastropheeeez
If it seriously is that lame of a development I will stop watching it. It's just trying to deal with one more ridiculous social issue that is just ridiculous to cover in a series about a zombie apocalypse
Last edited by SonderKommando (2010-12-09 16:41:23)
Robert Kirkman says he doesnt plan on ending the story.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I understood that after I read the comic book synopsis.
My question is, how can they end this series?
On a side note, I don't quite understand the walkers. Are they dead and their heart is not pumping, but their brain and other muscles are? Wouldn't they rapidly decompose?
Good article, and that's why I've always preferred Danny Boyle's "infected" story compared to George Romero's "walking dead". It's easier to understand and makes more sense. Plus, it allows the humans to retain their speed.SonderKommando wrote:
Robert Kirkman says he doesnt plan on ending the story.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I understood that after I read the comic book synopsis.
My question is, how can they end this series?
On a side note, I don't quite understand the walkers. Are they dead and their heart is not pumping, but their brain and other muscles are? Wouldn't they rapidly decompose?
Thats one of the things about the Zombie apocalypse, they would decompose.
Cracked article
That might be the worst analogy I think I've ever heardUzique wrote:
oh yeah go tell that to ebert about every film he criticises and has bad things to say about
JUST DON'T WATCH THE FILM, DUMMY!
is your book bad? nevermind the critics. just tell them to not read it!
rofl you are fucking hilarious
Last edited by Poseidon (2010-12-09 18:00:08)
he just doesn't make any sense... he first came into this thread to bash my calling it "deep for a zombie show" (which it is)-Sh1fty- wrote:
Uzique is hard to understand at times.
find me 3 good examples of where i rate what i like as the "best ever". even kanye's album which you were quick to jump on me for (GOD FEAR THE MAINSTREAM ) i don't rate as the best of the decade let alone album of the year. LOST is one of my favorite shows of all time but I don't consider it the "best ever". Maybe in my life, sure.. but I've only been watching TV series since about '04.Uzique wrote:
of course i derive some enjoyment from it. to say that a tv programme has bad parts - incredibly frustrating, patronising bad parts too, at that - isn't so say "OH THIS IS SO AWFUL I JUST CANNOT BEAR TO WATCH!" that would be to take an extremely critical view. you, on the other hand, seem to take an extremely rapturously-praising view of everything you like. the stuff you like is always '_ of the year' or 'groundbreaking' or something or other. it's not. it's entertaining, but the writing is pretty fucking mediocre.
Last edited by Uzique (2010-12-09 18:31:32)
Stopped reading there. The Living dead series all had deep meanings behind them. It just wasn't in-your-face simple.Poseidon wrote:
it is deep COMPARED TO OTHER ZOMBIE MEDIA
wow. it is an absolutely fundamental lack of reading on your part, uzique. as it always is. compared to a george romero violence fest,
Last edited by Macbeth (2010-12-09 18:30:37)
Yeah I wouldn't call Romero's films "deep" in that sense, more that there was a message behind the violence that was easy to see and forget about.Macbeth wrote:
Stopped reading there. The Living dead series all had deep meanings behind them. It just wasn't in-your-face simple.Poseidon wrote:
it is deep COMPARED TO OTHER ZOMBIE MEDIA
wow. it is an absolutely fundamental lack of reading on your part, uzique. as it always is. compared to a george romero violence fest,
First Living dead- Southern racism
Dawn of the Dead (70's) - Materialism in the U.S.
Day of the Dead- militarism.
Re watch the movies and do a bit of research before you call George Romero films simple 'violence fest'.
Uzique wrote:
i'm not reading it like that at all. if you would re-read your posts you would say that i am calling the attempt to 'deepen' the zombie genre a generic failure-- inherent, perhaps, in the constraints and expectations of the subject. i'm saying that i don't think it has worked-- i recognize what they've tried to do and integrate into all the zombie-slaying action, but my exact critique is that it comes across as tacky tokenism, rather than thoughtful engagement.
this is not a complicated critique.
In response to the first episode, and only the first episode. You flipped on me for it. The first episode was the only one that had a really deep emotional story, with Rick's sighting of the family who'd killed themselves (with "God forgive us" written on the wall in blood), with the black guy being absolutely unable to shoot his wife regardless of the fact that she was just a shell of her previous self, Rick going back to kill the leg-less zombie out of sympathy and telling her "I'm sorry this happened to you". You're really going to argue that Dawn of the Dead had more emotion than that? Really?Poseidon wrote:
It's VERY deep. Especially for a show about... well, zombies. But that's AMC for you. Home of Mad Men and Breaking Bad... two of the best shows of the past 20 years.
Are you kidding? Day of the Dead was worth nothing more than it's violence. What's different about those attempts than The Walking Dead's attempts other than the increased violence?Macbeth wrote:
Stopped reading there. The Living dead series all had deep meanings behind them. It just wasn't in-your-face simple.Poseidon wrote:
it is deep COMPARED TO OTHER ZOMBIE MEDIA
wow. it is an absolutely fundamental lack of reading on your part, uzique. as it always is. compared to a george romero violence fest,
First Living dead- Southern racism
Dawn of the Dead (70's) - Materialism in the U.S.
Day of the Dead- militarism.
Re watch the movies and do a bit of research before you call George Romero films simple 'violence fest'.
They weren't deep. Macbeth just likes seeing violence.eskimo_sammyjoe wrote:
Yeah I wouldn't call Romero's films "deep" in that sense, more that there was a message behind the violence that was easy to see and forget about.Macbeth wrote:
Stopped reading there. The Living dead series all had deep meanings behind them. It just wasn't in-your-face simple.Poseidon wrote:
it is deep COMPARED TO OTHER ZOMBIE MEDIA
wow. it is an absolutely fundamental lack of reading on your part, uzique. as it always is. compared to a george romero violence fest,
First Living dead- Southern racism
Dawn of the Dead (70's) - Materialism in the U.S.
Day of the Dead- militarism.
Re watch the movies and do a bit of research before you call George Romero films simple 'violence fest'.
Last edited by Poseidon (2010-12-09 18:37:03)
I guess you don't pick up on a theme, concept, or meaning behind a story unless it's pointed out to you in a painfully obvious way.Poseidon wrote:
Are you kidding? Day of the Dead was worth nothing more than it's violence. What's different about those attempts than The Walking Dead's attempts other than the increased violence?
Try again.