right? between that and T-Dog they really have hit almost all of the stereotypes.
all they need is a homicidal gay man and trifecta.
Jonathan ,'Lies My Parents Told Me'
A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
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right? between that and T-Dog they really have hit almost all of the stereotypes.
all they need is a homicidal gay man and trifecta.
I'll ever so slightly defend Lori on this -- under stress, some people revert to gender stereotypes (which kinda explains a lot about the Republican party right now) as a source of comfort and "rightness". I think that's where she was coming from.
I remember the Nightstalker series as being rather funny. But remember, it was a rather lone example of its genre at the time... (What year was Night of the Living Dead released again?)
NotLD was 1968, Theo.
So there'd been enough time for Romero's "zombies" to get accepted as the canon mythology.
Although KNown, dont think they were "the" Canon yet. Other zombie mytholodies still very active in popular culture, including the tormented zombie who passed for human and hated his (almost always a he) unlife.
Loved the episodes of Korra. I just hope the rest of them will be accessable on line.
Do you have any examples of that, Typo? I'd love to read about some pre-Romero non-Vodou zombies.
Well they were usually Voudou, but the author's Voudou, with not much of a nod to actual Voudou culture.
One really awful non-Voudou one 'The Return of Dr. X' [link]
Humphrey Bogart is the zombie doctor.
[on edit] early on, a pale Bogart with a streak of white in his hair is introduced stroking a bunny. "we are both victims" he says. "Victims of what he is asked" answer: pause "circumstances".
There were also some movies in which zombies are used as soldiers in WWI trench warfare, which I think was in part meant to be a reference to how horrible the conditions in which soldiers lived and died in in the trenches.
Any other examples besides Return of Dr. X, Typo?