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      • It is common to trace the contemporary zombie back to George Romero's 1968 B-movie shocker, Night of the Living Dead. In fact, that film never uses the z-word and was a very loose adaptation of Richard Matheson's vampire novel, I Am Legend, where the last human alive attempts to find a cure for the vampire virus.
      www.bbc.com/culture/article/20150828-where-do-zombies-come-from
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    • White Zombie (1932) - Director: Victor Halperin. - IMDb user rating: 6.3. - Metascore: data not available. - Runtime: 69 minutes. “White Zombie,” considered to be the first feature-length zombie movie, was inspired by Kenneth Webb’s Broadway play, "Zombie."
    • I Walked with a Zombie (1943) - Director: Jacques Tourneur. - IMDb user rating: 7.1. - Metascore: data not available. - Runtime: 69 minutes. Described by Turner Classic Movies as “one of the most poetic films in the horror genre,” this early zombie classic follows a nurse named Betsy (Frances Dee), who is hired to look after a Carribean sugar plantation owner’s wife (Christine Gordon).
    • The Plague of the Zombies (1966) - Director: John Gilling. - IMDb user rating: 6.6. - Metascore: data not available. - Runtime: 90 minutes. “The Plague of the Zombies” takes place in an 1860s Cornish village, where a medical professor (Andre Morell) and his daughter (Diane Clare) must race to save their neighbors after they've been infected by a zombie virus conjured by the voodoo magic of the villainous village squire (John Carson).
    • Night of the Living Dead (1968) - Director: George A. Romero. - IMDb user rating: 7.9. - Metascore: 89. - Runtime: 96 minutes. In this game-changing zombie film, flesh-eating zombies descend upon a rural Pennsylvania town, and the townspeople must barricade themselves in a nearby farmhouse for a chance at survival.
    • Zombie Traits
    • Origin of Zombies
    • Zombies and Voodoo
    • Real Zombies Reported in Medical Journals
    • Zombies in Pop Culture
    • Are Zombies in The Bible?
    • Our Fascination with Zombies
    • Sources

    A zombie, according to pop culture and folklore, is usually either a reawakened corpse with a ravenous appetite or someone bitten by another zombie infected with a “zombie virus.” Zombies are usually portrayed as strong but robotic beings with rotting flesh. Their only mission is to feed. They typically don’t have conversations (although some may g...

    The Ancient Greeks may have been the first civilization terrorized by a fear of the undead. Archaeologists have unearthed many ancient graves which contained skeletons pinned down by rocks and other heavy objects, assumedly to prevent the dead bodies from reanimating. Zombie folklore has been around for centuries in Haiti, possibly originating in t...

    Voodoo (sometimes spelled vodou or vodun) is a religion based in West Africa and practiced throughout Haiti and the Caribbean, Brazil, the American South and other places with an African heritage. Many people who follow the voodoo religion today believe zombies are myths, but some believe zombies are people revived by a voodoo practitioner known as...

    Though it’s rare, there are several credible reports in medical journals of people using these compounds to induce paralysis in people, then revive them from the grave. A 1997 article in the British medical journal The Lancetdescribed three verifiable accounts of zombies. In one case, a Haitian woman who appeared to be dead was buried in a family t...

    According to The Undead Eighteenth Centuryby Linda Troost, zombies appeared in literature as far back as 1697 and were described as spirits or ghosts, not cannibalistic fiends. They arrived on the film scene around the same time as their monster peers, Frankenstein and Dracula, with the 1932 release of White Zombie. But it wasn’t until 1968 that zo...

    The modern-day, carnivorous zombie isn’t in the Bible. But there are many references to bodies being reanimated or resurrected which may have inspired zombie myths throughout history. The book of Ezekiel describes a vision where Ezekiel is dropped in a boneyard and prophesies to the bones. The bones start to shake and become covered with muscle and...

    Why does the modern world have such a love affair with zombies? History may be to blame, according to Stanford literary scholar Angela Becerra Vidergar. Vidergar tells Stanford News she believes mankind’s perception of violence took a drastic turn after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. She feels such large-scale disasters...

    Haiti and the Truth About Zombies. University of Michigan. How to Make a Zombie (Seriously). Live Science. Tetrodotoxin. Toxnet. Stanford Scholar Explains Why Zombie Fascination is Very Much Alive. Stanford News. Zoinks! Tracing the History of Zombies from Haiti to the CDC. NPR. Zombie Burials? Ancient Greeks Used Rocks to Keep Bodies in Graves. Li...

    • 'White Zombie' (1932) - Director: Victor Halperin. - IMDb user rating: 6.3. - Metascore: data not available. - Runtime: 69 minutes. White Zombie, considered to be the first feature-length zombie movie, was inspired by Kenneth Webb's Broadway play, Zombie.
    • 'I Walked with a Zombie' (1943) - Director: Jacques Tourneur. - IMDb user rating: 7.1. - Metascore: data not available. - Runtime: 69 minutes. Described by Turner Classic Movies as "one of the most poetic films in the horror genre," this early zombie classic follows a nurse named Betsy (Frances Dee), who is hired to look after a Carribean sugar plantation owner's wife (Christine Gordon).
    • 'The Return of the Living Dead' (1985) - Director: Dan O'Bannon. - IMDb user rating: 7.3. - Metascore: 66. - Runtime: 91 minutes. The Return of the Living Dead largely operates as a parody of Romero's iconic zombie films, opening on three employees at a medical supply warehouse accidentally releasing a gas that turns corpses into flesh-eating zombies.
    • 'Shaun of the Dead' (2004) - Director: Edgar Wright. - IMDb user rating: 7.9. - Metascore: 76. - Runtime: 99 minutes. Shaun of the Dead holds up as both a beloved British comedy and a distillation of post-9/11 cultural anxieties and Gen X disillusionment with life.
  2. Mar 15, 2023 · The modern zombie is loosely inspired by the Vodou zombi, which originated in what is now Haiti. The Vodou religion was created by enslaved Africans who were forcibly brought to Haiti to work on plantations. These original zombis looked nothing like the modern-day ones.

  3. The roots of the zombie tradition in American drama can be traced to Henry Francis Downing's 'Voodoo' from 1914. Though it didn't directly feature the living dead creatures known as zombies, the play was set in the Caribbean and featured voodoo magic as part of the plot, both of which are essential elements in the zombie tradition.

  4. Jul 28, 2023 · But it’s in Haiti that the mythical basis of the zombie originates. In the Haitian voodoo religion, a zombie is a dead person re-animated by a bokor (sorcerer or witch) using necromancy.

  5. May 26, 2021 · From the moment they first rose from the dead on-screen in the 1930s to Zack Snyders ‘Army of the Dead,’ zombies have been a go-to vehicle for deeper messages. By Adam Nayman May...

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