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Plants vs. Zombies Expands Web of Hate Once More

Posted By on January 19, 2011

This time they’re going portable with an invasion of the Nintendo DS:

PopCap Games, the worldwide leader in casual video games, today announced the widely anticipated North American release of Plants vs. Zombies™ for the Nintendo DS®. Expertly adapted in the PopCap tradition, the game features all of the engaging gameplay included in the PC edition — Adventure, Survival and Puzzle modes — while adding multiplayer action, plus four all-new, exclusive mini-games and 14 achievements. Available immediately in North America, the game carries an SRP of US$19.95.

Plants vs. Zombies for the Nintendo DS has been tuned specifically for dual-screen gameplay and features multiplayer action via an ad-hoc wireless network in the game’s Versus mode, where players can go head-to-head against one another as sunflowers, or zombies.

Considering the way that Zombies are depicted in Plants vs. Zombies I’m not sure why anyone would want to play as them.

Lest we forget, this is the way that they think about Zombies at Popcap Games:

You make sensible points, John. I hold no special animosity towards the zombie community, though I accept I have participated in promulgating stereotypes about same. Were I to meet a single zombie who treated me with courtesy and respect rather than with a groping claw-toothed scramble for my skull, I must confess I would be better disposed towards the, as you call them, “Differently Animated.” As it is now, I am likely to seek the sturdiest shovel I may find to plant in my attacker’s melon.

I lay my prejudice bare. I see zombies as a curse and a class of monstrosity, pitiful beings with no desire other than for brains and, perhaps in their best moments, for utter destruction. If these unliving creatures have other purposes, I await evidence of such with great interest.

Yours,

Stephen Notley

Mr. Notley of course is the writer of Plants vs. Zombies so I feel that his position is fairly authoritative as to the game itself.

Given this unfortunate prejudice, I can’t say the ZRC is pleased that Plants vs. Zombies is marching stalwartly onto yet another platform and getting yet another chance to sway impressionable minds to hate with its adorable graphics and cartoon violence.

However, as always, we will be at the ready for dialogue and information, in the hopes of mitigating any damage done to the cause of Zombie Rights.

On the Ease of Headshots and Their Utility in Anti-Zombie Games

Posted By on January 18, 2011

It’s a well-established trope in Anti-Zombie media that you have to ‘shoot em in the head’. This cranial fixation, first seen in Romero’s infamous ‘Night of the Living Dead’, has rapidly suppressed almost all pre-Romero Zombie lore in the public mind, and as such, the Anti-Zombie gaming world naturally incorporated it as a prime gameplay mechanic.

(Being perfectly fair, ‘headshots’ were a common trope in shooting games long before the current wave of prejudicial virtual slaughter against the Differently Animated kicked up into high gear.)

A new web series entitled Immersion from Rooster Teeth, who are apparently well known in the gaming humor world, seeks to test common videogame tropes, and they decided to evaluate the notion that random grab-bags of Americana like those found in Dead Rising or Left 4 Dead could use firearms against the stereotypical videogame Zombies effectively.

Their results are somewhat surprising; I won’t spoil everything, but as it happens, with minimal firearms experience you too can be a watermelon-bursting killing machine, and even firearms novices should be able to murder with a shotgun.

Which is hardly reassuring for the Zombie Rights community.

I mean, it obviously made sense that the elite and highly bigoted special forces types seen in Capcom’s Resident Evil games would know their way around guns; likewise with the soldiers in Call of Duty. Now having seen for myself that out of practice individuals with minimal firearms experience in the recent past can pick up where they left off so easily?

I worry about our Zombie friends. After all, all it will take is some wacked out redneck, high on life, meth and PBR, to declare a localized ‘Zombie Apocalypse’ and then it’s guns aplenty and mayhem galore here in America. If Rooster Teeth’s results are accurate, the carnage would be even greater than I had previously suspected.

So sad, so terrifying.

Video is embedded below.

Snorg Tees Hates Zombies

Posted By on January 18, 2011

Hello, Snorgtees! We see you have a Zombie themed shirt with the slogan ‘Zombies Hate Fast Food’.

Depicting a mob of ‘Zombies’ chasing a jogger:

Zombies might like fast food, did you ever think to ask them?

Oh! ‘Fast food’! Har-har har.

So very clever. Too bad you couldn’t work in a reference to ‘cardio’ while you were at it.

Then when looking at that shirt you advertise this monstrosity to me as well. “In Case of Zombies, Break Glass” and a shotgun in place of the usual fireman’s axe.

Classy!

Or how about this design, furthering the ‘Zombies are murderous, violent savages’ mythology so beloved of the Anti-Zombie faction.

Zombies ruined a plain text shirt, or improved it?

Finally, to show how little human compassion and camaraderie there is amongst the Zombie haters at Snorg Tees, witness this shirt, saying from one Anti-Zombie fellow to another, in the event of their well-earned comeuppance at the hands of a righteous mob of avenging Zombies, it’s every Zombie hater for himself.

Tripping your fellow Zombie bashers.  For shame, or good show?

I’m cutting myself off now, because at some point criticizing their blatant Living Supremacism just becomes free advertising.

Snorg Tees: Bad for Zombies, Bad for America.

On the Promise and Peril of ‘Zombie Bohemia’

Posted By on January 18, 2011

This Horror Society piece reporting from the filming of upcoming Zombie film ‘Zombie Bohemia’ is both intriguing and a bit worrisome.

First, the good:

Production was currently underway, and pretty much wrapping, for a new zombie mockumentary that is a mix of horror and comedy. The film is called Zombie Bohemia and is directed by Vince Brando. That name may sound familiar to die-hard movie viewers. Mr. Brando, along with producer Mark Bell, co-owns a production company named Two Man Island Productions. They had a successful year in 2010 when their short film, Hushed, was screened overseas in the Cannes Film Festival. The duo was hard at work on Zombie Bohemia when I got the notice to check it out.

Zombie Bohemia is a short film about two rivals in the art world. Michael (played by Shawn James) is a zombie artist, literally. He is a zombie who makes zombie art, whether it is paintings, sculptures, or wood carvings. Michael is trying to make it in the New York art world, while his arch nemesis One (played by Tim Urian) has somehow captured fame and success with crappy art that is far less creative and wonderful than Michael’s. Throw in some unpleasant comments from One and a zombie who can’t be tamed, and yeah, bad stuff happens. Can you imagine the bad press Anton (played by Will Carey) is going to have to deal with after trouble goes down?

We have an actual Zombie character boys and girls! A Zombie Artist, no less. I’m coming up with a blank; has that ever been done on film before?

So that could be a serious step forward; the movie also seems to be addressing the cruel double standard the mainstream enforces upon the Differently Animated, often denying them both mainstream acceptance and, where applicable, economic advancement, so we can definitely see parallels with an art world that refuses to acknowledge the talented Undead.

On the other hand, there are troubling elements described in the article as well:

One of the lines during filming was, “therefore, I must remove the heads of our guests to prevent the apocalypse.”

Oh, the Apocalypse again, and over the top violence too?

Worrisome. Here’s hoping ‘Zombie Bohemia’ can rise above the typical blood-splattered ‘horror-comedy’ that defames Zombies and instead celebrates and acknowledges them.

That would get a Zombie Friendly rating for sure. Hint hint.

Tinfoil Hat Crowd Gets Their Own ‘Zombie Apocalypse’ Novel

Posted By on January 17, 2011

Oh brother. You know the ‘Zombie Apocalypse’ meme is getting out of hand when the survivalist black-helicopter crowd is latching on to it:

The walking dead. A global crisis. The remnants of America. Around the globe, the dead are rising to devour the living. Hospitals are overrun, and martial law has been declared. The streets are in chaos. Society is disintegrating. In a small south Texas town, the mayor has rallied his citizens against the living dead and secured their borders. Isolated in the countryside, the community holds their own. But when two strangers from San Antonio stumble into town, they bring news of a global peacekeeping force sweeping toward the city. Led by a ruthless commander, the force is determined to secure the republic of Texas on its own terms, and establish a new, harsh government for the plague-ravaged nation. Will the independently fortified Texas town hold out against the flesh-eating zombies and the tyrannical foreign army traveling down the road?

The book in question is called “Down the Road: On the Last Day” and is a sequel of sorts to a previous South Texas Zompocalypse story. An Amazon review lets us know that, yes, this really is a book for the nutbag crowd who think that any day now the UN will topple the mighty American empire and force us all to send our kids to Commie daycare, or something:

As they are trying to make their way through this new and horrific world they discover that UN troops have essentially “invaded” Texas in a government authorized effort to suppress the zombie threat and to round up and cordon off the living human survivors in FEMA camps. The two escape the nefarious UN soldiers and head to Beeville, a small town that has thus far held its own against the encroaching doom of the undead. They warn the town folk of this new menace and our story takes us up to and including the conflict between the town that refuses to surrender and the UN Troops sent to either wipe them out or force them into their concentration camps. The story focuses mainly on the citizens of Beeville, telling their individual stories and tying them all together as they fight to survive.

We are reminded again and again that FEMA, Homeland Security, and the military are all just vicious and brutal thugs in their efforts to suppress both the undead and the living. Add to the mix in this book the UN Peacekeeping forces who have been dispatched to Texas to get rid of everyone who stands in their way. We are treated to a sociopath of a leader, Captain Phillip Carson, and his gleefully malignant foreign troops who rape and execute a bloody swath across south Texas, all under the guise of regaining control of our nation. The comparisons to Nazi Germany and the suppression of the Jews are agonizingly obvious here-people are loaded onto cattle cars, anyone who resists is dealt with swiftly and violently, and they all end up in concentration camps.

Of course the politicians we are made aware of in this book are all sanctioning these efforts. President Herbert M. Walker (huh?), who presided over the nation during the attacks of 9/11 has agreed to allow the UN Peacekeepers on our soil. Former President and now UN Secretary General Jefferson Williams (who?) is also there to speak up in favor of this move, along with Massachusetts Senator Ted Kinney (uh…) and New York Senator Carl Shumer (ohhh kay). The thinly veiled fake names was a bit off putting, especially since the author mentions at one point that one of the characters started becoming mistrustful of the government during the Clinton administration. Would that be Jefferson Williams or William Jefferson Clinton that this person is referring to? Sorry, I know this is nitpicky but again it was rather distracting to me.

This book might actually be worth reading, for you masochists out there; it could well be our generation’s Eye of Argon.

As a Poli-Sci guy, let me dust off my B.A. (and common sense here) and provide a counterpoint to the dingbat lunacy described above.

1) While the UN does have a relatively small peacekeeping force, it does not actually have its own soldiers; they are all sort of donated/on-loan from member states, and peacekeeping actions are approved by the Security Council, on which the United States is a permanent member with veto powers. The book seemingly gets around this by having the US President call them in, but one has to wonder why; they are, militarily speaking, not even in the same *league* as our own armed forces. Did the Marines all go on vacay during the Apocalypse? Don’t the member states who contribute soldiers to the UN have their own ‘Zombie problem’ to deal with, this being a ‘global crisis’ and all?

One additional, somewhat humorous detail: the UN forces are, as noted, for ‘peacekeeping’. What does that mean, exactly? Well, it means they stand between two angry groups and keep them from fighting, more or less… and both sides have to agree for them to be there, generally speaking:

While the peacekeeping force is being assembled, a variety of diplomatic activities are being undertaken by UN staff. The exact size and strength of the force must be agreed to by the government of the nation whose territory the conflict is on. The Rules of Engagement must be developed and approved by both the parties involved and the Security Council. These give the specific mandate and scope of the mission (e.g. when may the peacekeepers, if armed, use force, and where may they go within the host nation). Often, it will be mandated that peacekeepers have host government minders with them whenever they leave their base. This complexity has caused problems in the field.

When all agreements are in place, the required personnel are assembled, and final approval has been given by the Security Council, the peacekeepers are deployed to the region in question.

Does this mean that the UN got the Zombies on board with this plan? They are the second side in this conflict, right?

Somehow I doubt that’s how it goes in the book.

2) The FEMA camp thing is a reference to a long-running and utterly insane extreme right wing paranoid conspiracy theory here in the United States. Basically there are, supposedly, a number of ‘camps’ around the United States where, any day now, our government is going to round up everybody who isn’t slightly to the left of Lenin and confine them, or possibly, gas them like badgers. Crackpot loons have been passing these things around for years, and the only problem is: these camps don’t exist.

For an utterly hilarious (I mean literally, I laughed out loud several times) tour of these ‘FEMA camps’, check out this Popular Mechanics post.

Among the supposed FEMA camps in the US are a *North Korean gulag*, a train repair depo and a large National Guard base.

Seriously.

3) The politicians being skewered above hardly ever agreed on anything. President Walker is presumably supposed to be G.W. Bush (George Walker Bush) or his dad (George Herbert Walker Bush) or both. Carl Schumer is obviously Senator Chuck Schumer, who wouldn’t sell his country out to anyone except Wall Street, and Ted Kinney is presumably Senator Ted Kennedy, who has the distinction of being no-longer-alive, though not a Zombie so far as we’re aware here at the ZRC.

For the record, the current UN Secretary-General is Sec. General Ban Ki-Moon. There has never been a Secretary-General from the United States, let alone a former President. If you’re wondering though, there was a President with a similar name to the Sec-General here: William Jefferson Clinton. You probably knew him as ‘Bill’. (The amazon review mentions this as a possibility; I think we can assume he’s correct)

So Bill Clinton took over the UN and he, G.W. Bush and two fairly liberal US Senators sold the United States down the river when our entire armed forces were off somewhere building sand-castles. Now it’s time for the UN Peacekeepers, who in reality are mostly poor soldiers from the Global South, to round up the remaining Living American people into FEMA camps and, if we’re lucky, gas us. Only some stalwart small town South Texans stand between the Zombie hordes, international pinkos and your Mom and her apple pie.

Riiiiiiiiight.

It looks like the ‘Put Zombies Into Absolutely Anything’ genre of books is still going strong, and more’s the pity; if nothing else it means the ZRC’s backlog won’t be getting dealt with anytime soon.

Groan.

Formerly Prestigious and Arty Cuban Film Industry Wallows in Anti-Zombie Gutter

Posted By on January 17, 2011

Cuba’s formerly state-subsidized film industry has long been known for art films and high brow entertainment, but in recent years as the economy fell on harder times, the state has cut back on its support, and the industry has crumbled.

In response, at least one enterprising and very mercenary young Cuban filmmaker has an idea on how to achieve international commercial success: bash the daylights out of Zombies on-screen in one of those so-called ‘horror-comedies’, like ‘Zombieland’ or or course, ‘Shaun of the Dead’.

For more details and a conversation with the director of, get this, ‘Juan of the Dead’, check out this BBC report:

Call of Duty Prepares to Cash-in on More Anti-Zombie Bloodlust

Posted By on January 17, 2011

Call of Duty: Black Ops, already having made countless millions (ok, I’m sure they actually counted them) off of slaughtering virtual Zombies, is about to release its first expansion pack, and yes, there will be more Anti-Zom carnage to foist off upon the general public:

Treyarch and Activision have today revealed details around the first pack of downloadable content for Call of Duty: Black Ops, called First Strike. News of this pack first broke in December, but today its 5 new maps – 4 for multiplayer and one for the zombie game mode – have been detailed in YouTube video form. The pack will hit Xbox Live on February 1st for 1200 Microsoft Points. No word on a release date for PC and PS3.

We’ve talked about Call of Duty: Black Ops and its socially unacceptable message before here at the ZRC, but even we are shocked to see them move so quickly on pushing more out the door.

I mean, who do they think they are, Capcom?

Even I Get Nightmares About Zombies

Posted By on January 17, 2011

Sad to say but it’s true; no one, no matter how well-intentioned and educated they are about The Cause, can completely ignore the negative effects of the Anti-Zombie media our culture is drowning in.

As a result, I had a miserable night’s sleep last night, punctuated by a bad dream in which, yes, I was under attack – by Zombie Stereotypes.

Honestly it shook me a bit. As famously stated in the Inception trailer:

Dreams feel real while we’re in them. It’s only when we wake up that we realize something was actually strange.

I won’t go too deeply into the details of said dream, because honestly, it was pretty banal and stupid in the light of day. Zombie Dad locked in the basement infects Zombie mom, who comes up the stairs, breaks down the door and tries to eat me, only her head falls off and I’m pretty sure it started screaming.

You know, a nightmare. Only rife with Anti-Zombie prejudice.

Clearly the only remedy is to do more for Zombie Rights.

Wired Tries to Correlate Zombie Popularity to Economics

Posted By on January 16, 2011

I know, I know, I’ve talked a lot about these faux historical analyses of Zombie media popularity over time a lot lately. First with i09, then with Flowtv, now with Wired, right?

Believe it or not, Wired’s is one of the weakest, since they don’t show, or even explain, their work in any meaningful way.

Basically, Wired decided to test an idea that has been floating around about the popularity of Zombies:

But is there more to this trend than meets the gouged-out eye? Horror maestro Stephen King once theorized that zombie movies reflect mindless consumerism, making them more popular in boom economic times. Meanwhile, vampire flicks tend to rise when the markets go down like the sun. (More recently, financial columnist Bruce Watson put some meat on that idea, suggesting the US market is not bear versus bull, it’s zombie versus vamp.)

Wired did its own data analysis and that theory didn’t hold water—or blood. Zombie franchises continued to spike even when the Dow plummeted in 2008, and they’ve kept going. This can mean only one thing: a zombie bubble. Better TiVo these new shows before the zombie crash.

(io9 tested a similar concept and came to more or less the opposite conclusion, for what it’s worth)

Here, we’re not even told where this Zombie movie/tv list comes from, so we can’t check it for ourselves. But the biggest flaw that stands out for me is their metric for economic performance. The theory is that economic performance influences movie popularity. Ok, how would that work, to play devil’s advocate?

Well, movie studios make films they think will sell, so they’re at least attempting to cater to audience tastes. Thus the economic figures that matter are the ones that would hypothetically influence the collective pop culture consciousness. Wired chooses to measure this with the Dow Industrial Average, which is a figure that’s easy to chart over time. It’s also a strange one to use as a proxy here. The vast majority of Americans do not make much of their income off the stock market, and most jobs are generated by small or medium businesses, not the large concerns that are listed on the exchange. Plus the stock market has a tendency to surge or bust based on its own internal foibles or insider trickery (high frequency trading is a big problem at the moment).

At best, what the Dow tells you isn’t the state of the economy as most Americans, ie, most filmgoers perceive it – it’s how large institutional investors, mutual funds, hedge funds and the like PERCEIVE the economy performing, as it pertains to large, publicly traded companies.

In other words, it doesn’t tell you anything about how the economy might be influencing the bulk of moviegoers.

For example, over the last year the Dow average has gone up about a thousand points, while large corporations posted all time record breaking profits. However, economic life for the average American has sucked, with unemployment hovering just below 10%.

Thus, under Wired’s theory, we’re in a ‘boom’ and should expect Zombies everywhere in entertainment, even though that ‘boom’ is limited to a tiny portion of the movie-going population. Rich people and financial sector workers go to the movies, sure, but it’s not like movie theatres apply a progressive pricing scheme, so a rich butt in your seats is worth about the same as a blue collar one.

At any rate, Wired was unable to find a correlation between their list of Zombies in TV/the movies and their chart of stock market performance, so they jokingly conclude that this must mean, rather than their theory being wrong, that Zombie films are in a ‘bubble’ and destined to crash and decrease in numbers. But hey, they got a pretty graph out of it, so that’s something.

Head. Desk. etc.

4th Annual Chicago Zombie March (June 11th 3:00pm – 6:00pm)

Posted By on January 16, 2011

Just a quick note to say that we will definitely be at the 4th Annual Chicago Zombie March. I’m still debating a couple of conventions to go to and hope to put our final con schedule for much of 2011 up soon, but this is a no-brainer. Millennium Park is a neat place, and there’s even plenty of (outrageously expensive) parking there for out of towners. Last year we attended but got a bit rained out and delayed by that wonderful Chicago traffic; this year we’ll get there nice and early, and bring umbrellas too.

Free literature, extra signs and some swag to give away will no doubt accompany the ZRC, as it usually does.

If you’re in the area, you should come out for Zombie Rights on June 11th. It should be a lot of fun!