"I mean what They and Their psychiatrists call 'delusional systems.' Needless to say, 'delusions' are always officially defined." --Capt. Geoffrey "Pirate" Prentice, Gravity's Rainbow
"Well, that's, like, just your opinion, man." --The Dude, The Big Lebowski

Saturday, October 3, 2015

If Daryl Dies We Riot, or Why We Watch The Walking Dead

Next Sunday, AMC’s The Walking Dead returns to live television, and its legion of fans can’t wait to veg out and eat up the season six premier. I have been accused of cultural elitism from time to time, but no show has gotten its teeth into to me the way The Walking Dead has. It’s so delicious, and there’s no obvious reason why its hoard of fans are drawn to it. The Walking Dead, while well-made, falls short of shows like Breaking Bad and Sherlock in terms of quality: Andrew Lincoln isn’t likely to steal any Oscars from Benedict Cumberbatch. Likewise, TWD—by necessity—falls short of a franchise like Star Trek in terms of vision: the characters are cut off from any sense of larger humanity. They cannot know what has happened to their world nor seek to fix it. Rather than a grand vision of an optimistic interstellar future a la Trek, TWD is an intimate peephole unto the end of our race. It’s kinda depressing actually, at least on the surface of it. So why is it that next Sunday by 8 PM, come hell or high water, I, along with a massive herd of Americans, am going to throw my phone in the other room and park my ass on the couch to take in this grim vision of our fleeting future? Indeed, anyone who doesn’t watch the show must be wondering what all the fuss is about. What's the big deal? I have wondered myself…
While the dystopian vision of the end is as old as Science Fiction itself (consider, for example, H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine, which is in turn predated by Mary Shelley’s The Last Man), anyone who’s been paying attention has noticed a proliferation of post-apocalyptic books, film, and TV since the release of the expanded edition of Stephen King’s The Stand in 1990. For some reason in the 90s—which gave us Deep Impact and Armageddon—we were really concerned with asteroids and, more importantly, avoiding the onset of the apocalypse. Since the millennium, we’ve become obsessed with survival after the end. Prominent examples include 28 Days Later (and its sequel), the completion of The Matrix franchise (begun in 1999), The Day After Tomorrow, Snowpiercer, the Zac Snyder remake of George Romero’s The Dawn of the Dead, the rebooting of the Mad Max franchise, reality television’s Doomsday Preppers, The CW’s teen targeted The 100, World War Z, Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar, and Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Road (and it’s film adaptation)…just to name more than a few.