Zombies'

Ford SportTrac Forum

Help Support Ford SportTrac Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

EddieS'04

In Memoriam 1950-2022
Joined
Sep 26, 2004
Messages
17,726
Reaction score
270
Location
Pasadena, TX
Parlimentary Zombies



When Parliament in New South Wales, Australia, is ready to adjourn, a Member has the honor of giving a short speech before making the motion for adjournment.



This is the actual adjournment speech given on 27 November 2013 by The Honorable Dr. Peter Phelps, who is 45 years old. You'll wish your political representative was so cool.





Zombies



I speak about a significant development in the cultural malaise greeting the West, and I speak of nothing else than zombies. Yes, zombies. Zombies are the proverbial canary in the cultural coalmine. One might be tempted to say, "Where go zombies, so goes the nation." I speak in particular tonight about the moral menace posed by the concept of fast zombies. Frankly, zombies do not run. Zombies are lumbering; they are eternal; they are blind and brainless. They rise from the grave, but they do not run. In the 1970s, the zombie mythos was created by the great George Romero films such as the Night of the Living Dead and the Dawn of the Dead. The dead rise, but they do not run. They lumber, they lurch?you can run, but you cannot hide. You think because they are slow you can outrun them, and thereby save yourself from the apocalypse that awaits you. You can grab your shotgun, but eventually it will run out of shells. You can grab your chainsaw, but it will run out of fuel. You can grab your baseball bat, but even the strongest maple will one day splinter and break. Indeed, zombies are a powerful cultural symbol. They are a metaphor for the death that awaits us all?the strong, the smart and the brave. It does not matter because zombies eventually will be feeding on your innards.



What do we see in the current cultural crisis facing the West? We see fast zombies. Fast zombies go against the entire mythos of zombiedom. Once upon a time you thought you could run, but now you cannot even do that, because you are being chased by the Usain Bolt of the undead. Consider the current zombie shows that have been foisted on us: 28 Days Later, Dead Set, Zombieland. All these movies have zombies running faster than CityRail. All this phenomenon of fast zombies or pseudo zombies, as they should be, is a disgrace to the zombie mythos. Even I Am Legend has zombies running about and showing feelings. I will put aside the fact that the movie I Am Legend is a disgraceful attempt to steal the vampirism in the original book and then turn it into a quasi-zombie story. Movies such as Warm Bodies have zombies falling in love. Worst of all, we now have pole-dancing zombies in the movie Zombie Strippers. This is an outrage. Zombies do not fall in love, they do not dance, and they do not express feelings.



Even World War Z, which is arguably the finest zombie book ever written, has been completely destroyed by Hollywood?and how many times has that phrase been used?by making them fast. The great zombie mythos has been rewritten and it has now become the Stawell Gift of horror movies. Why is that so? It is because of the demand for instant gratification from Generation Y. They cannot wait 90 minutes for the eventual evisceration or to have your brains being eaten by a lumbering zombie; they have to have a disembowelling every 30 seconds or they are onto the iPhone and then onto Twitter complaining about how boring the movie is and running a #oldpeoplezombies. I warn the people of New South Wales, Australia, Western civilisation and the world that we will continue to decline until we get our zombies back under control and stop them from running around like a bunch of undead chooks. Merry Christmas.



Question?That this House do now adjourn?put and resolved in the affirmative.



Motion agreed to.



The House adjourned at 7.25 p.m. until Tuesday 4 March 2014 at 2.30 p.m.









 
I really don't get the zombie fascination. I was really pretty upset when I rented World War Z without knowledge that it was a zombie movie; I had previously swore off supporting the trend. Can the genre be any more overdone? The vampire and zombie obsession is ridiculous.

:soap:
 
Hugh, I dont get the zombie, vampire, witch, and etc., facsination either.

I just thought this peice of dry humor was funny...
 
Content aside, I did like the humor of the political representative. I left that out of my rant, haha.
 
Funny. I purposefully panned "World War Z" after the reviews came out. Not even catching it on Blu Ray or on-demand. However, stuck flying to Europe this week and having it be the second of what will likely be three such trips in a month, I had to watch something in the seatback on-demand system.



I watched World War Z. I liked it. Are zombies overdone? Maybe. What I liked about WWZ was how quickly the virus spread, and it did so because a small town or a big city could get overrun because of how quickly the zombies turned, and how quickly they then hunted. What I like about the Walking Dead is that everyone is already infected so if you die, you turn. What I additionally like about the Walking Dead is how now that the outbreak is well over a year old the zombies look ever increasingly more gross...more decayed.



It's a genre. Like any genre it will wane and fall in popularity. Were Western's too popular in the 50s and 60s?



TJR
 
I haven't seen Walking Dead so maybe I should hold my judgment for a well done zombie show.



Yes, Westerns were too popular mid-century. There are some great ones but obviously many were just trying to turn a quick buck based on just being "of the genre," as we now see with vampires and zombies.



My agitation with the zombie stuff is the pop culture around it, not so much the movies themselves. Every time I see an "Official Zombie Outbreak Vehicle" (or variant thereof) bumper sticker I shake my head. I guess I just don't understand "grown men" having those kind of fantasy fascinations. I'm just boring...
 
Hugh said:
I shake my head. I guess I just don't understand "grown men" having those kind of fantasy fascinations.



I know what you are saying. When I see guys pre-occupy huge amounts of time an energy over fantasy football, a sports team, etc, I think the same thing.
 
I watch most Georgia football and some Steelers games but I hardly get wrapped up in it. I will be buying season tickets to the Georgia games next year. It's an atmosphere addiction.



I love watching the Atlanta Braves...at the stadium. I probably watched three of their games this past season on tv and haven't been to a game in three years.



I tried fantasy football one year in college and lost interest halfway through and lost $100 as a result. That requires dedication.

 
Top