A quick comment on Land of the Dead
Jun. 29th, 2005 09:35 amI left this comment on a thread on Matt Yglesias's TPM Cafe post about going to see Land of the Dead instead of Owr Leeder'z latest speech:
I think that Land of the Dead is set very soon after the events of Night of the Living Dead, almost certainly long before the events of Day of the Dead. (Possibly it's set during the span of time covered by Dawn of the Dead.) There's a sense in Land that the Fiddler's Green outpost is part of what still believes itself to be a functioning society with a zombie problem, as opposed to a post-apocalypse society. Certainly many of the technological details--the large remaining caches of petrol and ammo, the relatively unspoiled deserted towns, the functioning electrical grid and cell phone network--all point towards it being soon after things changed. In such a situation, continuing to believe in the utility of paper money is not nonsensical.
That said, Land is certainly no Day of the Dead. It's more like the made-for-TV version. I still enjoyed it, but it's not even as good a zombie movie as Shaun of the Dead (which, actually, was quite good as a zombie movie and superb as a comedy).
I think that Land of the Dead is set very soon after the events of Night of the Living Dead, almost certainly long before the events of Day of the Dead. (Possibly it's set during the span of time covered by Dawn of the Dead.) There's a sense in Land that the Fiddler's Green outpost is part of what still believes itself to be a functioning society with a zombie problem, as opposed to a post-apocalypse society. Certainly many of the technological details--the large remaining caches of petrol and ammo, the relatively unspoiled deserted towns, the functioning electrical grid and cell phone network--all point towards it being soon after things changed. In such a situation, continuing to believe in the utility of paper money is not nonsensical.
That said, Land is certainly no Day of the Dead. It's more like the made-for-TV version. I still enjoyed it, but it's not even as good a zombie movie as Shaun of the Dead (which, actually, was quite good as a zombie movie and superb as a comedy).