Zombie Virus in AMC's The Walking Dead
Creator Robert Kirkman is finally ready to talk about what caused the fictional zombie pandemic in The Walking Dead. For fans who have been following the story of The Walking Dead since Rick Grimes first awoke from his coma back in 2003, this revelation is a long time coming.
It's actually impressive
that Kirkman has kept his cards so close to his vest for so long considering
the franchise has expanded to infect every quadrant of our media world: video
games, books, TV you name it. Now, having reached the epic conclusion of his
long-running tale, at least in comic form, Kirkman must have decided it was
finally time to dole out a little fan service.
Early on in the comic series,
it's revealed that every human in the world is already infected with the zombie
pathogen; while zombie bites accelerate the transformation, any death
eventually results in zombification. We've seen survivors navigate every facet
of this deadly scenario without any understanding of the zombie horde's
origins.
Well, wonder no more. On
Twitter, Kirkman finally confirmed that the cause of this pandemic is
extraterrestrial in nature. Specifically, the zombie virus came from a "space
spore," in Kirkman's own words. Kirkman has long credited the work
of the late horror movie director George A. Romero as a key inspiration for The
Walking Dead.
He's said on numerous
occasions that his entire magnum opus resulted from the question,
"What if a zombie
movie just kept going?"
In light of this, the
space spore explanation may be yet another homage to Romero particularly his
iconic zombie flick Night of the Living Dead, wherein the zombie apocalypse has
potentially been instigated by radiation released from a space probe to Venus.
"That's the space
vehicle which orbited Venus and then was purposefully destroyed by NASA when
scientists discovered it was carrying a mysterious high-level radiation."
Fans weren't sure they'd
ever get a straight answer from Kirkman as to what started the zombie virus in
The Walking Dead. In a 2018 Q&A on Tumblr, he dismissed the notion of
revealing the source of the zombie contagion as irrelevant to the story,
saying:
"Maybe years after
it's all over I'll just casually mention it in an interview. That seems like a
very J.K.
Rowling thing to
do."
Shots fired!
Fortunately for curious
fans, it seems like Kirkman found his inner Rowling. On the surface, it may not
seem like Kirkman's earthbound tale of humans surviving against impossible odds
has much to do with extraterrestrials, but the alien explanation has always
been bubbling around the edges of The Walking Dead.
When Kirkman and his
creative team originally pitched the idea to Image Comics, Kirkman had to
concoct an outlandish backstory for the series just to catch executives'
attention. At that time, he told a substantial white lie that the zombie
pandemic in The Walking Dead was designed by aliens who intended to use the
zombie apocalypse to make Earth a softer target for invasion.
Although Kirkman was
pretty clear that this was never really his team's intention, it wasn't the
last mention of E.T.'s in The Walking Dead history. While not necessarily
canon, a bonus ending for issue #75 was inspired by this misleading pitch. In
this sci-fi re-skin, a lightsaber-wielding Michonne explains that hostile
aliens unleashed the zombie horde to turn humanity into a race of slaves bound
into service by harvesting
water, which their alien
overlords use as currency.
How's that for an
alternate ending?!!
Aside from the
explanation of the virus being "totally irrelevant" to the comic
series, Kirkman also believes that the TV iterations of his work are unlikely
to explore either the source of or cure for the virus. While certain fans may
prefer a pat resolution to the apocalypse plaguing the world of The Walking
Dead, Kirkman's instincts are probably spot-on.
The third TV series for
the franchise, The Walking Dead: World Beyond, takes place a decade
after the beginning of the zombie pandemic, with a set of young protagonists
still grappling with the world of the undead.
"The end of the
world was our beginning."
The lack of a cure is
definitely organic to Kirkman's original vision. The Walking Dead has never
been a series about finding a miraculous cure it's a story about survivors
re-establishing a new normal in a world that will never be the same. Discovering
a cure would undermine the entire premise.
But hey, at least we
officially know what started the collapse in the first place.
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