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Published 16:15 12 Dec 2024 GMT
Updated 16:20 12 Dec 2024 GMT

A Netflix zombie series that has slipped under the radar is now being hailed by a certain contingency of viewers as being 'better than The Walking Dead'.
To many fans of the zombie genre, no other television show comes close to reaching the heights of the hit AMC horror drama that first landed on TV screens in 2010 and remains relevant within the global zeitgeist to this day.
In the same way that the Resident Evil series stands alone as the greatest zombie video game, and how 28 Days Later and Dawn Of The Dead can't be matched in terms of beginning to end big screen living dead madness, The Walking Dead remains the benchmark for 'how to do zombies right' across several seasons.
However, some Netflix viewers might argue that there's an overlooked contender that gives the iconic franchise a run for its money.
Black Summer landed on Netflix in 2019 and stars Jaime King (White Chicks) as a mother separated from her daughter in the aftermath of a zombie apocalypse.
Rose, along with a small group of refugees, embarks on a harrowing journey to find her loved one. She must brave a hostile new world and make brutal decisions during the most deadly summer of the apocalypse.
If the description isn't enough to entice you, the show has also received the Stephen King seal of approval.
Arguably the greatest horror writer of all time, King tweeted the following about Black Summer in 2019: "Just when you think there's no more scare left in zombies, THIS comes along. Existential hell in the suburbs, stripped to the bone.
BLACK SUMMER (Netflix): Just when you think there's no more scare left in zombies, THIS comes along. Existential hell in the suburbs, stripped to the bone.
— Stephen King (@StephenKing) April 15, 2019
"No long, fraught discussions," he added. "No endless flashbacks, because there's no back story. No grouchy teens. Dialogue is spare. Much shot with a single handheld camera, very fluid. Showrunners could learn a lot from this."
Aside from surviving the episode-by-episode chaos, there is also an overarching story in Black Summer that the survivors must make it to a stadium in order to be picked up by the military and escorted out of the city before bombs are dropped in an attempt to contain the zombie virus spreading further.
But even in the few weeks since all hell has broken loose, the zombies aren’t the only problem the survivors are facing.
Yep, when faced with decimation, we get to see the worst depths that some of mankind are willing to steep to just keep their own heads above water.
There is a constant sense of foreboding, which is only alleviated when replaced by out-and-out panic.
Black Summer is the shot of adrenaline to the heart that the zombie genre needed, and horror fans should check it out ASAP.
The show's two seasons are available to watch on Netflix right now.
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BLACK SUMMER: No long, fraught discussions. No endless flashbacks, because there's no back story. No grouchy teens. Dialogue is spare. Much shot with a single handheld camera, very fluid. Showrunners could learn a lot from this. If they could work, that is.
— Stephen King (@StephenKing) April 15, 2019

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