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  1. The point is the safe zone was run by corrupt people that wanted power over everyone else's lives. The main characters stopped the corrupt regime, though unfortunately a lot of innocent people died too, (though I would imagine that there were some people who managed to escape.)

  2. No they do not eat people. It's airborne so just being in close proximity to infected will spread the infection. (Well not openly airborne, but it spreads through contact and exposure with infected, with or without fluid contact.)

  3. In 'Return of the Living Dead' they eat braaaaaaaaains...and zombies don't have those (they need the electrical impulses of the living brain to dull the pain of being dead). In the other 'Dead' movies (Romero's) they seek living flesh.

  4. TLDR-I've long held the opinion that Big Daddy can be interpreted as the zombie inversion of Night of the Living Dead's Ben or possibly an equivalent to Nat Turner, perhaps not as an unintentional figure reflecting racism but in the context of his character's role among the zombies vs. the humans.

  5. They aren't explicitly visible in the crowd of fresh bodies the zombies are eating later, but it is doubtful they could have escaped. Chekhov's Skill: Big Daddy still remembers how to operate a gas pump, and the zombie butcher can still swing a cleaver.

  6. Land of the Dead (2005) is the fourth in George A. Romero's "Dead Series" started by Night of the Living Dead, which continued with the sequels Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead. Romero also...

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  8. Box office. $46.8 million [3] Land of the Dead (also known as George A. Romero's Land of the Dead) is a 2005 post-apocalyptic horror film written and directed by George A. Romero; the fourth of Romero's six Living Dead movies, it is preceded by Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead, and succeeded by Diary of the Dead ...

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