The Zombie Rights Campaign Blog

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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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Zombie Comic Roundup: Marvel Zombies 5 #5, Deadpool Merc with a Mouth #13

Posted By on October 19, 2010

These two reviews are a long time coming, and they finish out our reviews for two formerly ongoing Zombie comics series. Let’s get to it.

In Marvel Zombies 5 #5, we again return to our dimension-hopping gang as they enter what is the strangest dimension yet: one without any superpowered beings of any kind.

So, basically, our dimension.

They are here to find a very rare sort of ‘zombie’ indeed, but take their time doing so, which gives us a chance to meet the individual in question: Wendell, a sad comic fanboy who has become infected by the Peter Jackson variety of Sumatran zombification virus, here sans the rat-monkey delivery system. (for more information, see the Wikipedia article on Braindead/Dead Alive)

How did he contract the disease? Well, as it so happens, he got it from an imported comic, a ridiculously rare team-up issue featuring Machine Man and Howard the Duck from the glory days of 1985.

Yes, if you were wondering, this is a meta-comic on steroids. In fact, the issue opens with Wendell in a comic shop, discussing Marvel Zombies 5 #4, the immediately preceding issue of this very comic book series, and complaining about how the MZ franchise has supposedly declined under Fred Van Lente’s stewardship.

(Full Disclosure: Mr. Van Lente was kind enough to correspond with the ZRC on previous occasions, and even to donate two signed trades of Marvel Zombies 3 and 4 for the Lurch for the Cure auction)

Now now, Mr. Van Lente; don’t let the bitterness of comic nerds get you too down. As the ZRC has attested numerous times, you have, in fact, greatly expanded the scope and scale of Marvel’s Anti-Zombie bigotry, extending it to whole new realms of perfidy and malicious slander that Mr. Phillips and Mr. Kirkman never achieved in their glory days bashing super-powered Zombies.

I’d offer him a hug, except for fear of a restraining order.

Marvel Zombies 5 flows as an almost uninterrupted monologue by Wendell as he discovers the state of his condition and ponders his fate and how best to cope with his newly Undead status. Wendell doesn’t seem like a bad guy, and he tries his best to cope, in the absence of appropriate caregivers or counseling from those who have gone before him into Undeath. He has difficulty dealing with his newly restrictive diet, existential problems with his new not-strictly-alive nature, and questions the ultimate fate of a Zombie in the Living man’s world. Eventually, he comes to make a noble, if somewhat cliched, decision.

And then our ‘heroes’, as well as his personal ones, meet up with Wendell and do what they do best: remorseless mayhem.

Sigh.

Honestly, this particular issue, extremely self-referential though it is, seemed to be going places and addressing concerns rarely, if ever, addressed even in the best of mainstream comics featuring zombies, or even actual Zombie characters. What is the current fascination with the super-powered Undead? Why are Zombies considered villainous, whereas a man with unstable spider genes crudely grafted into his own DNA destined for heroics? What do comic book readers get out of the exercise? What does the writer bring to the table, and how does this genre-within-a-genre relate to the usual narratives of noble self-sacrifice and heroic struggle?

Then of course, it shrugs off the questions, engages in some violence, and you’re done with another Marvel Zombies series, but not before Howard the Duck gets in one last dig at the entire universe of zombie stereotyped media:

marvel_zombies_5_5

Moving on, Deadpool Merc with a Mouth came to a premature end with issue number 13, and we here at the ZRC were pretty piqued about the whole thing. Here you had the best, most sympathetic ongoing Zombie character in contemporary mainstream comics, and his series gets canceled so that he can be featured in a new crossover spectacular?

Well, ok, that’s actually not atypical, and even vaguely flattering, though it does mean moving from a starring role in a small cast to an ensemble player. If only they had found a better way to accomplish the transition!

In the last issue we reviewed here at the ZRC, Zombie Deadpool had been forced to bite his sinister yet inept AIM abductor to save the day and prevent the gang of good guys being stranded in the Marvel Zombieverse. The consequences of that act play out in this issue, as Zombie Deadpool inexplicably becomes overpowered by his ‘hunger’ again and plots to eat his friends, or at a minimum to callously betray them and escape to a dimension full of new people to eat. His abrupt and dispiriting face-heel turn then facilitates a dramatic comeuppance/time travel paradox that leads into the Prelude to Deadpool Corps event (check back soon for a ZRC review):

deadpool_merc_13

This shocking change of heart almost completely negates his character development up to this point, and is fairly inexplicable, although it does mirror his initial mysterious reform (which although welcome from a Zombie Rights perspective was never fully explained in Marvel Zombies 3-4).

Argh! Why must Marvel taunt us so? We here in the Zombie Rights movement had finally gotten an admirable portrayal in the most biased medium toward the Differently Animated, and it was cruelly snatched away to close up a plot loophole?

I mean, this is Deadpool! Plot holes don’t need to be closed at all, let alone in such a defamatory way.

Still, the ZRC has learned to take these things in stride. Setbacks and sniping occur often in the struggle against our noble Cause.

None of which is to say it doesn’t sting.

Comics Cache Found

Posted By on October 18, 2010

Over the weekend I had a task to complete: after I rearranged the office space and so forth here at ZRC Central, I discovered, to my dismay, that a pile of comics yet to be reviewed had gone missing, and so I quested for them.

Lo, eventually, I did locate them, so I can finally, finally review the last issues of Deadpool: Merc with a Mouth, Marvel Zombies 5, get on with the reviews of I, Zombie, and there’s an entire trade I missed doing as well.

Other than that? We’re still gearing up for this weekend at the Horror Society Film Festival, which is totally awesome and you should go too. Unfortunately other commitments mean we probably can’t make Sunday, but Saturday is a must for us; not only is the latest anthology series featuring longtime friend of Zombie Rights Marv Blauvelt having its world premiere, but they’re also showing some short films about zombies, and possibly their denial of the use of antiquated phone technologies in France (don’t spoil it for me; I want to find out how Cabine of the Dead ends for myself).

All that plus the Zombie of the Year nominees this week at the ZRC Blog. Hooray!

Things You Learn About Immediately Before

Posted By on October 15, 2010

When I went looking for more information about Cabine of the Dead, a short film about Zombies trying to use a phone booth (I think – it’s in French and the Youtube teaser seems pretty vague), I learned via advertising about a film festival with lots of zombie movies, along with some terrific shorts, coming up November 5th-7th in Peoria, Illinois called the Drunken Zombie Film Festival (named after the people who are organizing it, the purveyors of the Drunken Zombie Podcast).

Now, I know, I know – the name doesn’t sound very Zombie Correct, and I’m sure that most of the zombie movies being shown are terribly Un-Zombie Friendly. However, they are also screening a number of short films that I would be remiss in failing to recommend, having seen them myself at festivals over the last few years.

Death in Charge, Night of the Hell Hamsters AND Thirsty are showing in one day; that’s fantastic, truly. None of them are about Zombies, so the ZRC doesn’t have an Official position, but they’re all worth going out to see. If you’re anywhere in the area, I can heartily recommend taking the time.

I’m debating packing up and heading down there myself, even though that would make 3 long festival drives in one month; these short movies really are that good. Plus I could review a few more no-doubt horrendous Anti-Zombie atrocities (I’ll see Cabine of the Dead at least at Horror Society either way).

Tempting; mix work and pleasure.

But if you happen to be near Peoria, you have no excuse; go see these films! Night of the Hell Hamsters in particular will change your life.

Japan Teaches Its Children to Hate

Posted By on October 14, 2010

More shocking news out of Japan today, as video from a Japanese TV show’s Anti-Zombie stunt makes the rounds.

Essentially, what seems to have happened here is this: a tv show convinces three small siblings that the Zombie Apocalypse is at hand, and a Zombie is specifically coming to their home to eat them.

Now, any apocalypse where your doom is personally assigned and delegated by appointment seems to be a pretty well run apocalypse to me, but these are very small children so they don’t seem to realize how… artificial the whole setup is.

The kids are encouraged by the host of the show to run home and prepare traps and defenses against their personalized faux-Undead assailant, and being so encouraged, they quickly devise a variety of Home Alone-esque traps to deter the ‘Zombie’.

The entire exercise is obviously intended as some sick form of humor, but we here at the ZRC find it harrowing. The sheer lengths that it is apparently acceptable to go to in contemporary Japanese society in order to teach their children hatred for, and fear of, the Differently Animated is astonishing. Live action Zombie-bashing drills? On television?

I think it’d be a good idea for any Zombies traveling in Asia to avoid Japan whenever possible; consider this video a travel advisory. It’s just not safe walking the streets now that they’re inducting the next generation into Anti-Zombie assault squads. You know when the paramilitaries start indoctrinating children into violence that a society is on its last legs, and very bad things tend to quickly follow.

The disturbing footage is viewable below:

Cabine of the Dead

Posted By on October 14, 2010

We haven’t seen this film yet, but we shall at the Horror Society Film Festival on October 23rd. I don’t read French, so I’m not sure what is supposed to be going on, but this seems to be a movie about a jerk who hogs a phone booth and won’t let Zombies use it.

I mean, really. Phone booths are few and far between these days. If you don’t have a call to make, please exit the booth and let the next customer at it. Just because you have a pulse, that doesn’t make you important or give you special phone privileges. Exercise some common courtesy, man!

Take a look for yourselves behind the cut:
(more…)

Diving Into TV Tropes

Posted By on October 13, 2010

I’ll admit to killing quite a bit of time today digging through the pages of well-known internet time devouring site TV Tropes, in particular their lists of pop-cultural items relating to Zombies and the Undead.

Think of it as crowd-sourcing, if you like; let the internet bring the Zeitgeist here to the ZRC.

Of course, in the interests of full disclosure I have to note that the ZRC is listed, briefly, on the ‘Zombie Advocate‘ page’.

What’s the status of Zombies in internet pop culture? Well, mostly, not good, but that’s to be expected. Extensive writeups on Romero vs. Russo zombie ‘rules’, talk of cannibalism and gory hyperbole, low on sympathy to say the least. Even much of the Zombie Advocate page deals with the hype over Dead Rising 2′s Faux-Zombie Rights Activist campaign, complete with extremely-minor party candidates in the UK.

I had decided not to pursue Dead Rising 2 after the monumentally disappointing demo, which was agonizing just as a videogamer and not even as an activist, but from reading those details I might have to take a peek when it hits the bargain bin.

On the whole, we have a lot of work to do. More on that soon, with our nominees for Zombie of the Year 2010!

More Walking Dead Spinoffs

Posted By on October 12, 2010

It must be hard to be Robert Kirkman, celebrated Zombie hater and comic auteur. I mean, sure, you have a enormously successful series of comics denigrating the Differently Animated, and your tv show based on said comics is almost sure to be a smash hit, bringing the gruesome anti-Zombie violence to the small(er) screen in a way that hasn’t been done before.
I mean, heck, they even got Frank Darabont of Shawshank Redemption fame to helm the tv series, and the series will be shown in a staggering 120 countries.

Yet, imagine if you will, when Mr. Kirkman goes into a Barnes and Noble, and sees, in the fiction section, tables and tables full of ‘Zombie’ books. Oh, how it must burn; his particular works are safely ensconced, segregated you might say, away from the ‘real’ books, in the comics section.

Well, a solution is at hand; Walking Dead branded *novels*:

The Walking Dead is already an acclaimed comic book, and at the end of the month it’ll become a TV series — but now creator Robert Kirkman is turning it into a trilogy of novels as well.

According to Publishers Marketplace, Kirkman made a deal for “a trilogy set in the zombie-infested world from Kirkman’s New York Times bestselling comic book series as well as the upcoming AMC television show.”

Next up: Walking Dead lunchboxes and placemats, if this is any indication.

Merchandizing! It’s all about merchandizing (or perhaps ‘moichendizing’ is more accurate).

World Zombie Day: 10/10/10

Posted By on October 10, 2010

Attempting to bridge the divide between the Living and the Differently Animated can be a tough job; thankfully, the ZRC isn’t the only organization out there trying to make this positive difference.

For you see, today, 10/10/10, is ‘World Zombie Day‘, the third annual incarnation of a sort of mass Zombie Cultural Event. On World Zombie Day, Zombies around the planet gather together for Zombie walks and other events, in order to collect canned goods and other nonperishables for their local food banks.

Our good friend Baron Mardi may be attending the flagship WZD event in Pittsburgh as we speak; when last we spoke he was planning to be in town this weekend and hoped to make it, to join his fellow Undead brethren in celebration of Zombie Culture. If pictures or reportage become available, rest assured I will post them here for posterity.

Sadly, due to a busy convention season this year, we’ve had to save our travel budget back and so couldn’t find a suitable location to scout out ourselves. We gladly join our fellow Zombie Enthusiasts and supporters around the globe today in spirit, however. Obviously we strongly encourage this sort of peaceful bridge-building activity as a method toward greater tolerance and understanding, and this is a sterling example of how, contra the harmful stereotypes embraced by some, Zombies are not mere shambling creatures out to get your brains, but productive members of society.

Zombies giving back to the community; it’s a wonderful occasion.

ZRC Store: Wristband Update

Posted By on October 10, 2010

Just putting a quick post here to say that we have reordered the wristbands, but there’s a bit of a backlog, so we’re hearing November sometime before we get them. Ouch.

We’ve made a minor change to the design, and obviously we’ll update the store page’s graphics when we have a sample. Basically, we’ve taken our web address off the wristbands, for two reasons. One, it was considerably more prominent than we thought it would be on the original design. We at the ZRC are delighted when people are aware of our organization and the pivotal role it plays in the Zombie Rights movement, but this isn’t about us; it’s about the Zombies, and helping them to live Zombie Strong. Putting our address on equal footing with the message isn’t quite compatible with that message.

Two, removing the url address removes a layer of printing, lessening the cost of producing them. We haven’t set the pricing yet but it should be lower than the current pricing scheme, or we might just donate the extra money to Lynn Sage, I’m not entirely certain so far.

Stay tuned for more updates, and thank you for your patience and support.

Store Update: Zombies Forever Prints Now Available Online!

Posted By on October 8, 2010

I know we’d mentioned the ‘Zombies Forever’ prints we had produced for conventions this summer, and some of you out there may have been wondering when they would be available for sale online.

Well, the answer is: Now.

Before we could sell them on the internet, we had to arrange for packaging supplies, figure out shipping costs and the like, and we’ve been redoing our office-cum-warehouse space to make it easier to run the store as well, so things got a bit sidetracked until the other day when I realized, “Hey — why aren’t we selling Zombies Forever prints on the Z-store?”

Thusly, it had to come to pass. We had already ordered shipping tubes from U-line, so all that was really left to do was ship a prototype package to see what needed to be done and what the rates would be, and I did that a couple of days ago, so last night the Technical Director set up the new ordering information on the store page.

About the pricing:

If you want to buy a single poster, it’s five dollars, which includes all shipping costs, sales tax in Wisconsin and Indiana, the cost of printing the posters *and* a 1 dollar donation to the Lynn Sage Cancer Research Foundation as part of The Lurch for the Cure. If you have already purchased a single poster and its commensurate shipping, you have the option of purchasing additional posters to ship in the same tube (up to 5), for only 3 dollars a piece; 1 dollar still goes to Lynn Sage for each poster sold.

Now, doesn’t that make you feel good about taking a stand in favor of Zombies and against Sparkly Vampires?

Posters are shipped in sturdy Uline poster tubes that are thick enough for whacking your enemies on the head and sent via USPS First Class, so they should arrive quite quickly and be ready to place upon your wall/cubicle/door to inform the world that your tolerance for glittery child-stalking blood suckers is at an end.

It’s an important message, and it raises money for cancer research, so please feel free to plaster them all over.

Even if you don’t buy a poster, you can help spread the message with the free Zombies Forever desktops, as always.