Dickless Zombies

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DICKLESS ZOMBIES began when Bill Zebub, who is not a horror purist, wondered if zombies were symbols. Could they be an artistic way to depict incessant problems, that by themselves are trivial, but the constant barrage in overwhelming numbers seem impossible to defeat? Are zombies a metaphor for plague?

Bill Zebub decided to write a script in which zombies were a symbol of conformity. The brain gets too much information to attend to all stimuli, so it takes shortcuts. Conformists take intellectual shortcuts – the group as done all the thinking, making the conformists little more than a trained dogs.

In previous movies, Bill Zebub’s message was that a moral person is someone who actively thinks, and who makes a decision after careful analysis. A conformists just acts blindly, from brainwashing. A conformist’s actions might seem morally-based, but there is no morality when a decision was never questioned. You can’t be called moral for having a knee-jerk response.

Conformists do not like people who are outside of the group-norms. There is nothing moral about that.

Bill Zebub thought about the kind of characters who would be noteworthy in a zombie apocalypse of this nature. There would surely be a prepper. You might have met the kind of person who seem to wish for an end-of-the-world scenario. Such a person has guns, a five year supply of freeze-dried food, and myriad booby traps.

Women might be considered currency in an aftermath. A fan who said that he was a sniper told Bill Zebub that in the flooding of Hurricane Katrina, people sought shelter at a stadium, but gangs took over. Women who arrived were assured of safety, but some became sex slaves. Whether or not the sniper was telling Bill Zebub the truth, the story seemed like something that should be in a dystopia.

While Bill Zebub thought about the types of characters who should be in the story, the epidemic hit America, and the shutdowns and fear-mongering began. This was great material for a movie about conformity, but that is not a cause for celebration. The worst behaviors imaginable became common.

The anti-intellectualism movement seemed to have taken over the world. It was like living in the Twilight Zone. None of this could be real. Do people with an I.Q. over 70 really think and behave this way?

The heart of the script stayed intact, but Bill Zebub slowed down the writing because he wanted to see more.

The movie is not as dark as “A Devil’s Wind” and it is not preachy in any way. Nothing is presented as law or as truth. The primary focus was on entertainment, and all characters were to have good AND bad qualities. No heroes, no villains.

This was a creative exercise, and as such, was not written in a three-act structure. (If you don’t know what that is, suffice it to say that this not a typical movie in any way – but that doesn’t mean that it is good, haha)

The creativity is continuing as the movie is edited. The only rule in making this movie was for everything to be fluid (open to change).

The reason why the movie is called “Dickless Zombie”is because, in this world, adults want to be treated like children. They want the government to tell them what to do, and for the government to punish people who are free-thinkers. As for children, they are considered to be totally innocent Disney characters. Yes, some children are totally naive, but surely you must remember when you were a kid – there were lots of assholes your own age. Some were sadistic. Most used foul language. That brings up a point – radio and television forbids some words because there is a chance that a child might here the foul language. Oh no! Surely that would destroy the child – maybe the kid would have to be put to sleep, let the pain of hearing such language cause too much damage. In reality, no experiment has ever proven that foul language has harmful effects on a child. Yet there are strict rules about language. Foul language, as well as slang, should be a personal choice. It’s just silly superstition that makes words bad, and superstition should never become law.

Getting back to the title, in a world when people have a delusional view of what kids are, adults have to remove the penis of any zombie that is defeated. Why? Because the pants will surely erode in the elements, and there is a chance that a child might see the horrid organ. (Don’t worry – the movie has no cutting of dick).

Don’t get this movie if you are expecting a silly horror parody. This movie is absurd (absurdity is actually sophisticated, while silliness is not). If abstract humor is your thing, then you might want to give this movie a chance.

Dickless Zombies

Cast

Ajna Wysowski – Rebecca

Jessica Walach – Jessica

Misty Lovelace – Janet

Erin Melancholic – Erin

Marc Pearce – Tristan

Bill Zebub – Bill

Frank Kiko Montoya – Blogger

Barry Williams – Blooger #2

Aaron Lane – Blogger #3

Misty Lovelace

The King of the B Movies

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