*Spoiler Alert: in order to critique this show, I need to reveal some plot points.
Zombies do not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, or ability…people do. This sad truth played out in the short but compelling 6-episode first season of AMC’s new show The Walking Dead. Zombies eat any living thing they come across – scary but not evil creatures because they don’t have a functioning brain which would allow them to be human, to distinguish right from wrong.
Admittedly, I haven’t read the graphic novels of Robert Kirkman, on which this series is based. So, I’m not 100% sure who to credit for the plot twists that portrayed the violent racism of a white supremacist, the vulnerability of daughter and wife to a physically-abusive man, and the terror of a woman fighting off a former lover who is trying to rape her. When the hospital is invaded by “walkers” (a.k.a. zombies), the living soldiers choose to execute ill and disabled patients rather than try to rescue them. [Mind you, the zombies do not seem to move fast enough to cause problems for someone armed with a semiautomatic weapon, but the choice is still made to sacrifice these lower status people.]
If a common enemy should unite, then social scripts of bigotry and bias should disappear. As one character notes in the season finale, human beings may have reached their point of extinction. The question is whether the zombies or our own human failings are to blame.
With record ratings, the Wall Street Journal and other sources report that this Sunday night’s finale attracted 6 million viewers. I may not be the typical fan of this show, so I wonder: will most viewers remain focused on the horror of a gruesome, fictitious zombie epidemic? Or, are there others like me, who despite flinching every time a zombie lunged for a bite of human flesh, left the season finale feeling acutely aware of the very real pandemic that plagues almost all societies: that potent combination of bigotry and selfishness which manifests as one of the many ‘isms. I’ve yet to see a ‘walker’ lurching down a street, but I have encountered far too many living human beings who lack empathy, respect, and compassion for each other and for the diversity of life on this planet.
Comments
Chuck — January 11, 2011
A zombie might not have any of those awful human flaws, but it won't run into a burning building to save you, or invent new medicines to cure you, or nurse you back to health when you are laid low, or teach you to read...
I don't know why it took me this long to have such a negative reaction to this post.
Chuck
Adina Nack — January 12, 2011
I appreciate your comment. True, a zombie cannot be heroic or compassionate or brilliant.
This series inspired me to reflect on the plot twists which showed the humans finding themselves in more peril due to the social and psychological limitations of their fellow living humans than due to the lumbering ranks of the walking dead. My goal in this post was to credit the creative forces behind this series for portraying a thought-provoking, complex, and diverse range of human reactions to a fictional horror/disaster. In this first season, viewers see the good, the bad and the ugly sides of humanity.
To be clear, this series does feature characters who are heroic (men, women and children): they serve as foils to the racists, rapists and wife-beaters. However, we may have to agree to disagree: I still say the zombies are far less scary.