The Zombie Rights Campaign Blog

Welcome to the ZRC Blog

We hope you'll find this blog an educational, entertaining, and inspiring source of information, whether you're recently undead, a long-time member of the differently animated, or a still-living friend of your fallen, yet risen again, brethren. Everyone with an interest in zombie rights is welcome!

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RiffTrax Live to Host ‘Night of the Living Dead’ on October 24th

Posted By on August 18, 2013

We’ve previously had a few unkind words to say about the treatment of the Differently Animated by the Rifftrax Live crew from their stint mocking ‘Plan 9 from Outer Space’. Mainly because they invited known Anti-Zombie bigot and songsmith Jonathan Coulton to perform on their broadcast.

Ahem. Chewing on the doors? Really?

But we’re willing to let bygones be bygones in hope of a more enlightened spoofing of the perennial Living Supremacist epic ‘Night of the Living Dead’ by the Rifftrax gang on October 24th.

Yes, just in time for Halloween too. This could be great! Or bad for our clients. We’ll definitely attend, and word is ZRC supporters around the country will be going as well. Maybe we can cook up some informational literature to go with the event.

And the ZRC strongly suggests those of you with ‘Zombie Strong’ wristbands wear them to the show, in solidarity with our Undead allies.

‘Birth of the Living Dead’ To Document Genesis of Romero Anti-Zombie Stereotypes

Posted By on August 18, 2013

‘Night of the Living Dead’ is one of those cultural touchstones that is so big that people are unaware of just how big it is. I can’t say how many times I’ve been at a convention for the ZRC, discussing Zombies and their rights in society, only to have someone tell me all about how Zombies all want to eat the Living, shamble about like sleepwalkers and generally misbehave, but who clearly have never seen, or at least not closely watched, ‘Night of the Living Dead’. Certain ideas from the movie, mostly negative and almost entirely Living Supremacist, have percolated into the popular consciousness, so that even those who don’t watch it are influenced by it.

It’s difficult to fight stereotypes people aren’t even aware they’ve picked up.

So a documentary about how ‘Night of the Living Dead’ was made could be useful to our cause; perhaps even in concocting some form of educational counter-campaign?

Rob Kuhns’ feature documentary BIRTH OF THE LIVING DEAD goes beyond just being a tribute to director George Romero’s work, to explore a critical moment in the American experience and the notion that horror acts as a reflection of national anxiety. The film details how Romero gathered an unlikely team of real Pittsburgh citizens — police officers, iron workers, teachers, housewives and a roller-rink owner — to shoot in a revolutionary guerrilla style that became a cinematic landmark and one of the most visceral and influential horror films ever made.

I know we’re intrigued here at the ZRC.

Zombie Beer! ‘Night of the Living Stout’

Posted By on July 29, 2013

I’ve wanted an excuse to dabble in more alcoholic sampling for the ZRC, but Zombie beers are rare. We had ZRC Pal Michelle Hartz graciously review a Zombie Zinfandel a while back as she has more expertise with the fermented grape world.

But now she also discovered another Zombie beer for me to review (if only I can score a bottle):

From the Depths of the Full Pint fermenters comes a Spine Tingling Stout that will have beer nerds returning from their graves. We single hopped this brew with cascade for a citrus character perfectly balanced with roasted malts for unrelenting great taste.

Pretty Zombie Friendly marketing copy too, we think.

Hmm. Stout.

Sankarea to Be Brought to America with Subtitle ‘Undying Love’

Posted By on July 29, 2013

A while ago I started, but sadly did not finish, watching an anime series about a necromancer and his Zombie friend called ‘Sankarea’. Well, Funimation is bringing it to America and they’ve got an English language trailer up:

Bearing in mind that I didn’t finish the show (yet), the ZRC feels that Sankarea was on track to portray the difficult and sometimes ethically fraught process of necromancy in at least a Zombie Tolerant manner. We’re happy to see something different from the skull-munching ‘norm’ being brought to America. Good show, Funimation!

Via Anime News Network

Day of the Dead to be Remade? Hmm.

Posted By on July 23, 2013

‘Day of the Dead’ is something of a black sheep in the Romero Zombie canon, but it’s also one of the earliest films to ‘humanize’ the Differently Animated.

In fact, we’ve been told on more than one occasion that ‘Day of the Dead’s sympathy for the Undead, particularly the star, Bub*, is the reason particular Zombie movie fans hate it.

By today’s standards, sure, ‘Day of the Dead’ is still Anti-Zombie, Bub aside. But in the early 1980s it was revolutionary.

So this news is a mixed bag for Zombie Rights:

And now… Romero’s Day of the Dead is being remade

Well with how many times Romero’s movies are being remade so far it was only a matter of time before Day of the Dead got this treatment. With how the last Day of the Dead ‘remake’ was let’s hope this one can do somewhat better. Honestly Romero’s classic was probably my favorite of his films so I’m skeptical about hearing this news. At the very least it’s being done by a team that has had some luck with remakes as Arrow in the Head has let us know it will be created by the team behind Texas Chainsaw 3D. So at the very least it should be watchable.

Look, as long as Bub remains a Zombie Rights icon, we’re happy here at the ZRC.

We’ll be interested to see how this shapes up.

*If he’s not the star, why is Bub all over the DVD cover?

Routine ZRC Update

Posted By on July 15, 2013

Greetings out there, Zombie Rights allies! Just a quick update on how things are shaping up for our Summer of Protesting:

The ZRC is going to at least do a drop-in visit for Flashback Weekend in Chicago on August 9th-11th, as they’re having a HUGE Dawn of the Dead reunion which is very exciting. Some of these Dawn of the Dead cast members have never been confronted by us in person before! We promise to be polite.

The ZRC will be at The Dark Carnival Film Festival August 30th-31st, with our banners and literature and hopefully some shiny new Zombie Friendly merchandise to peddle!

Then just two weeks later we will be in Indianapolis, Indiana for the huge annual horror convention, Horrorhound! This is one of the best outreach opportunities in the Midwest for the Differently Animated and we’re thrilled to once again be booth buddies with noted author Michelle Hartz, PHZ.

Apologies for sparse updates this summer; I have a law school related job AND the primary ZRC work computer killed itself and failed to rise from the grave a couple weeks ago. With the help of a Zombie Ally we’re building an awe-inspiring tower of computing power to further our efforts and the ZRC will be fully re-computerized by our big protest season!

Because we care. And also, using a smartphone for activism can be infuriating.

Favorite World War Z Review (That Isn’t Ours)

Posted By on July 2, 2013

Hilarious and extremely short!

World War Z: The ZRC Review

Posted By on June 29, 2013

After a recent bout of illness nearly had your ZRC President joining the ranks of the Undead a bit earlier than planned, I recovered, and the ZRC Madison staff saw ‘World War Z’ on Thursday.

Naturally, we were appalled at the treatment of the Undead in the film. That in and of itself wasn’t surprising. What was surprising was just how boring, uninspired and thoroughly derivative ‘World War Z’ turned out to be.

It’s impossible to review ‘World War Z’ without saying how obviously, and heavily, it borrows from and tries to exceed ’28 Days Later’. The opening 10 minutes break ground in the Annoying Shakycam arena, without managing to convey any of the tension and sense of panicked movement of ’28 Days Later’. ‘World War Z’ also blatantly steals the patented 28 Days Later ‘Fast Zombie Transformation Countdown’, but feels that 20 seconds is too long, so they cut it down to 10 seconds from bite to wanting to bite others. When Pitt is standing on a rooftop counting up to 10, pondering if he’ll have to jump to avoid becoming one of the Undead (which we resent, by the way), it takes some willpower not to shout ‘JUMP ALREADY’ at the screen.

World War Z is also extremely tepid and bloodless for an action horror movie, no doubt in pursuit of the coveted MPAA PG-13 rating. At times the film is a self-parody of self-censorship, struggling to keep the violence against the Differently Animated just out of frame. At one point near the odious climax it feels like you’re watching an ancient VHS Pan-and-Scan presentation, as Brad Pitt gets one of his melee weapons stuck in a Zombie victim and attempts to dislodge it for a good 10-15 seconds, all while avoiding the audience actually seeing a drop of blood or gore.

That’s impressive pandering to the censor board. I kept expecting a laugh track or some zany sound effects.

The movie has problems beyond Zombie-hating, lack of creativity and avoidance of depicted violence which might fill the MPAA fainting couches. Both the Art Director and I observed that the gender politics of World War Z are extremely conservative. (This, is a substantial deviation from the book). Women are not characters in the World War Z movie, they are props, things to be protected from the Undead Other, to motivate the almost-universally male characters.

There is only one noteworthy exception, an Israeli soldier named Segen (who is rescued by Pitt’s protagonist, Gerry Lane, but also rescues Lane on occasion). She, however, is a masculinized soldier archetype, a sort of gender neutral cipher. Meanwhile Lane’s wife literally spends most of the movie curled up in bed, huddling with the terrified kids. In fact her clinginess to her globe-trotting husband nearly gets Gerry, and presumably the human race, wiped out via an ill-timed satellite phone call.

Women and phones, amirite?

The movie’s gender relations are mirrored by its at-times very uncomfortable racial and national politics. It made me squirm in my seat a bit more each time the soft-spoken white man was undermined, betrayed or failed by the various Ethnic Others in the course of this film, whether it be a Latino family who turns down his sage survival advice, his apparently African boss at the UN who is utterly incapable of command, the vaguely South Asian virologist who gets a bit too trigger happy despite more sage advice.. and the list goes on.

Then there’s Israel. In ‘World War Z’ the book, Israel survives the ‘Zombie Apocalypse’ scenario better than most with a combination of militaristic preparedness, wall-building and self-discipline. They also, notably, have to put aside ancient racial and religious prejudices to do so. The Israeli government in the book even has to take violent measures against conservative religious elements attacking Arab groups within its borders. The movie turns this precisely on its head, positing that Israel survives due to its exclusion of the Arab other, along with paranoia from constant external threats of extermination, and even limited tolerance leads to… well, let’s just say, disastrous consequences.

In the end, of course, Lane’s globe-trotting leads to a solution of sorts, and the film closes on a treacly sermon about togetherness and cooperation that flies directly in the face of the movie’s earlier Integration is Death scenes set in Israel.

World War Z runs almost two hours and feels every minute of it. Rated ‘Living Supremacist’ for its Anti-Zombie hatred, Tedious for its sleep-inducing powers, and Squicky for its race and gender politics. Not recommended.

For Shame.. Everyone involved, honestly.

‘The Zombie Song’ Has Living-Undead Romance, But Negative Imagery Abounds

Posted By on June 17, 2013

This is a very catchy song.

About Zombies.

It has a fairly positive and occasionally quite sympathetic portrayal of Zombies.

But… well, just wait until the ending. I’m afraid we can’t endorse this sort of ultimately destructive relationship, even in the name of Living-Undead alliance.

Still, if you need something to listen to today, it is free and more Zombie Tolerant than most songs about the Undead.

The Straight Dope Displays Straight Prejudice

Posted By on June 17, 2013

Perhaps unsurprisingly, we can admit that the ZRC are occasional Straight Dope readers. It’s nice to have someone out there debunking myths and urban legends and outright zany-ness (is that a word)?

But when it comes to Zombies, I think that Cecil of Straight Dope fame is more than a bit misguided himself.

Particularly unfair are the repeated comparisons of Zombies to, well, politicians.

That’s just unfair! Very dirty pool, we think.

So The Zombie Rights Campaign sadly will have to keep stalwartly working to dispel Anti-Zombie myths ourselves, soldiering on alone, at least until factcheckers catch up with Undead Tolerance.

It’s an Unliving?