Saturday, November 28, 2015

Guest Blog- Mark Allan Gunnells- Why I Love Zombies

WHY I LOVE ZOMBIES

By Mark Allan Gunnells

I have no shame in admitting that I love zombies.  Romero films, The Walking Dead, even horror/comedy hybrids like Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland—I’m a junkie for tales of the undead.  I don’t often spend time analyzing why I like the things I like, but I have put a little thought into what it is that appeals to me about zombie stories.  I figured I’d share.

What appeals to me the most about zombie fiction is that the monster is rarely the star.  Vampires have personality and style, werewolves are people most of the time, but the zombie is just an empty vessel driven by nothing but hunger and aggression.  Sure, there are the occasional stories that imbue the undead with actual thought and motivation—Keene’s The Rising, iZombie, etc.—but for the most part the zombie is just a mindless monster that wants to eat your flesh.

And why do I find that appealing?  Because by making the zombie the least interesting part of the story, it opens things up to really delve into the living characters in the piece.  Often in fiction, especially horror fiction, the villains can overshadow the protagonists.  But in zombie fiction, the protagonists can shine, becoming all the more interesting and complex because of it.

Romero had a pretty simple formula.  Put a bunch of disparate people behind four walls—a farmhouse, a shopping mall, a military bunker—and watch as personalities clash.  The zombies were just an excuse to trap people who normally may not spend much time together in a place where they can’t leave, providing a chance to explore things like group dynamics, prejudice, power struggles, mental instability, the lengths people will go to in order to survive.  The zombies are fun and provide great grisly action, but the real entertainment comes from watching the living characters interact, the skirmishes they get into, the relationships that develop, the allegiances and conflicts that arise.  Stories of the undead can say an awful lot about the nature of being human.

Zombies can also act as a blank slate against which the atrocities of man can be reflected  in stark relief.  A movie like 28 Days Later really illustrates this.  The zombies in this film (though not of the traditional undead variety, introducing the new era of the “infected”) are intimidating and frightening foes to battle… but in the latter half of the film you come to see that what they are capable of pales in comparison to what the human mind can conceive.  Zombies act on instinct with no more malicious intent than a lion taking down a gazelle for food.  Man, on the other hand, perpetrates heinous evil with forethought and intelligence.  Using zombies as a comparison, this type of fiction has the potential to really highlight just how twisted and cruel humans can be.

With a story like World War Z (and here I talk of the book as the movie is a bit more generic and jettisons the novel’s structure which I think is its strength), you see humans fighting back against the zombies on a grand scale.  Such an epic canvas provides the opportunity to show a variety of characters battling the undead in a plethora of ways.  The resourcefulness and perseverance of humankind is celebrated.  Whereas something like 28 Days Later reveals the depths of depravity of which we as people are capable, World War Z celebrates the heroism and tenacity of which we are also capable.  That kind of balance is important.

All of these things combined are why I love zombie tales, and it’s why I love writing them from time to time.  With my new novella FORT (the shameless self-promotion portion of our blog), I tried to incorporate all the elements that make zombie fiction so appealing to me.  For my tale, I trapped a group of college kids in a dorm with dwindling school supplies and just sat back and watched what happened.  We had conflict, aggression, unexpected tenderness and support.  Some character did unspeakable things that put other people in jeopardy, while others demonstrated surprising selflessness and courage.  The story was a joy to write as it was as much an act of discovery as it was one of creation.  I went in with a set-up but no definite game plan, not knowing for sure who would live or die, but I let the story tell me what needed to transpire.


I’m not suggesting my novella belongs in the same category as the movies and books I mentioned in this blog, but I took all my love for zombie fiction and channeled it into this piece, and I hope people walk away from it entertained.



No comments:

Post a Comment