Here I’m going to examine one of the more pertinent issues facing
modern horror fans: the similarities and differences between zombies and
cannibals. Many claim the two are one and the same, and not without
justification: most cinematic zombies, after all, tend to devour human
flesh with as much relish as cannibals. There are, however, important
differences, notably the fact that zombies aren’t technically alive and
cannibals--be they the aristocratic slobs of LA GRANDE BOUFFE or the
primitive freaks of
CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST--usually are. I’ll
have more to say on that issue in a bit, but first let’s examine
the cannibal-zombie intersections a bit further.
The
Controversy
I’m not joking when I say this is a highly
controversial issue. John Martin’s 2006 book CANNIBAL: THE MOST
SICKENING CONSUMER GUIDE EVER!, a survey on Cannibalism in the cinema,
was criticized for including in its lineup straight zombie films
(wherein the flesh-eating is apparently “inter- rather than
intra-species”). I haven’t read Martin’s book and so can’t speak for its
contents, but do understand why an author might include zombie films in
a cannibal movie survey, even though zombie and cannibal lore are quite
different in most respects.
The Pastaland Cycles
When examining the intersection of zombie and
cannibal films, Italian cinema is a natural place to start. It’s a fact
that the late 1970s-early 80s heyday of the Italian cannibal film
(represented by CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST, CANNIBAL FEROX, CANNIBAL APOCALYPSE,
etc) paralleled that of the Italian zombie boom (see ZOMBIE,
ANTHROPHAGUS, BURIAL
GROUND, etc). The origins of those respective traditions,
however, are quite divergent.
Italian exploitation cinema of the time was predicated
on imitating successful American movies. For a film to be greenlit its
prospective director reportedly had to answer the all-important query “What’s
this like?” Thus, the spaghetti zombie cycle came about due to the
success of George Romero’s DAWN OF THE DEAD, while the cannibal films
followed the template of Umberto Lenzi’s 1972 THE MAN FROM DEEP RIVER, a
jungle
-set
MAN CALLED HORSE rip-off filled with unusually graphic violence and
elements culled from the notorious faux-documentary “Mondo” films of the
1960s (real-life animal killings, etc).
The results, unspooled on the screens of grindhouse
cinemas everywhere, were some of the most revolting movies ever made.
Origins and Offshoots
Zombie
cinema is fairly easy to trace. Essentially, you need only
take Romero’s seminal NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968) and work your way
backward and forward. This is to say that Romero’s classic contains many
elements filched from older zombie films like
J’ACCUSE!, THE LAST MAN ON EARTH and
CARNIVAL OF SOULS while also standing as the template for all sub
sequent
zombie media.
Cannibal movies are another matter entirely, as the
pastaland chow-downs outlined above are but one facet of an extremely
fragmented bunch of films. Prior to the late 1970s it seemed cannibalism
was largely the province of European art films (see Pier Paolo
Pasolini’s PORCILLE,
Fernando Arrabal’s J’IRAI COMME UN CHAVEL FOU
and Marco Ferreri’s LA GRANDE BOUFFE), where it was usually utilized as
a metaphor for bourgeoisie exploitation. In the mid-to-late 1980s, on
the other hand, cannibalism became a facet of screwball comedy (see
EATING RAOUL,
CONSUMING PASSIONS, EAT THE RICH, etc). And then there are
cannibal-themed oddities like
THE FOLKS AT RED WOLF INN (1972),
PARENTS (1989)
and LA CARNE (1991) that don’t fit into any of the abovementioned
cycles.
Cannibals and Zombies Today
These days cannibal flicks are pretty scarce (with
HANNIBAL and THE WOMAN
being among the scattered examples) while zombies are enjoying
unprecedented popularity in film and fiction. Thus, if you’re looking to
pit zombies and cannibals against one another you’ll have a clear
winner. Compounding that victory is the fact that today’s zombie media
doesn’t appear to have absorbed much from any of the above-mentioned
cannibal movie cycles, with the flesh noshing of THE WALKING DEAD, WORLD
WAR Z and so forth being inspired, like most everything else in modern
zombie lore, solely by the precedent-setting films of George Romero.
The reasons for zombie media’s popularity aren’t
difficult to fathom. Although zombie and cannibal films both deal in
extreme graphic violence and flesh eating, zombies aren’t real while
cannibals are (a factor made even more prominent in the Italian cannibal
films’ inclusion of scenes of
actual animal cruelty). Cannibals,
after all, do exist in our world, while I have yet to see any
evidence of actual zombies.
Comparisons
A friend of mine, who claims DAWN OF THE DEAD as one of his favorite
movies, has no problem viewing the zombie flesh munching of that film
but freaked out and shut off his VCR upon seeing a living, breathing man
do the same thing in CANNIBAL FEROX (for the record, I made fun of him
for doing so but it had little effect). Never mind that both films are
equally graphic in their depiction of human flesh eating, and that
CANNIBAL FEROX is in its own way just as fantastic as DAWN--and arguably
more cartoony (its cannibals, for starters, apparently don’t believe in
cooking their meat before devouring it).
By the same token, the 2001 release of HANNIBAL
inspired an outcry over its scenes of cannibalism, complete with a
memorably hysterical L.A. TIMES editorial pontificating about the
downfall of Western Civilization due apparently to those scenes. Yet
that editorial’s author was conspicuously silent during the releases of
28 DAYS LATER in 2003 and the DAWN OF THE DEAD remake the following
year. Both films were just as graphic as HANNIBAL but were zombie
themed, and so had the mitigating element of fantasy.
In Conclusion
I don’t believe cannibal movies are in any way
superior to zombie films, or vice versa. I do, however, contend that
both types, despite a few respective gems--J’IRAI COMME UN CHEVAL FOU
and CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST in the former category and NIGHT OF THE LIVING
DEAD and the original DAWN OF THE DEAD in the latter--are for the most
part equally overwrought, exploitive and unreal. In this respect, at
least, cinematic zombies and cannibals, despite their considerable
differences, are definitely two sides of the same coin.
--10/16/11