intertribal (
intertribal) wrote2010-11-08 10:10 am
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the bluebird of happiness, the chicken of depression
I finally got with the internet and tuned in to The Walking Dead last night. It is certainly a tension-filled show. But for the most part I was left feeling sort of turned off - I think maybe I've just overdosed on too many immediately-after-the-apocalypse scenarios. I used to be really, really into the genre, back when I first saw 28 Days Later. But I've become more and more frustrated with what I see as the genre's common pitfalls (like Hooray for Patriarchy, and Lucky Token People, and Good Vs. Evil). I recently watched the first season of the (canceled) BBC show Survivors - which, when I first heard of it last year, really intrigued me - and just had to stop because I couldn't take it anymore: the succession of deliberately-crafted morality plays (it's like everyone wants to write their own Left Behind according to their own personal, political, and religious compass), the very hammy acting, the predictable ups and downs of the survivors' emotions.
Survivors is definitely worse than The Walking Dead. So I wonder if my un-enthusiasm for this critically-acclaimed show means that this type of post-apocalypse scenario just isn't my thing anymore. I still got a real kick out of Pontypool, but Pontypool was very, very different. No guns in Pontypool. No foraging. No emergency transportation. No strangers thrown together, even, just co-workers. Contagion - which is what I really like about zombie movies - remains.
Or maybe I just need to take a break from massive apocalypses. I'll probably keep watching The Walking Dead, but with lowered expectations.
Survivors is definitely worse than The Walking Dead. So I wonder if my un-enthusiasm for this critically-acclaimed show means that this type of post-apocalypse scenario just isn't my thing anymore. I still got a real kick out of Pontypool, but Pontypool was very, very different. No guns in Pontypool. No foraging. No emergency transportation. No strangers thrown together, even, just co-workers. Contagion - which is what I really like about zombie movies - remains.
Or maybe I just need to take a break from massive apocalypses. I'll probably keep watching The Walking Dead, but with lowered expectations.
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The only thing I'm tired of with these scenarios is the amount of nihilistic gore. Last nights episode was great because Rick goes through that guy's wallet before going to work on him with the axe. It made the zombies human again, rather than just splatter-fare.
You mentioned Survivors, and though I watched the entire season, it sorta got old (fast) when they kept running into the same people and letting them get away with the same stuff. Over. And over. And. Over.
For post-apoc, I enjoyed much of season 1 of Jericho, but by season 2, it turned into a total mess. The nutbaggers should have just let them cancel it while it was still somewhat decent.
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Mark my words, yo. Rick will return and follow through on his "We're all human" philosophy and rescue the turd-in-the-punchbowl Merle Dixon.
And, I mean, I get the dramatic irony of Rick's wife lovin' her some deputy-dawg friend and such, but that dude is a jerk. If he'd leave ol' girl's sister to hang and fend for herself back on Hotlanta, he'd do any of 'em that way.
And you get superplus awesome points for your entry's allusion to the Far Side cartoon if I'm catching your drift.
P.S.--Much love for Pontypool.
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