Words matter. These are the best Zombies Quotes from famous people such as AnnaLynne McCord, Seth Grahame-Smith, Mark Pellegrino, Roddy Doyle, Catherine Hardwicke, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I loved killing zombies in ‘Day of the Dead.’ I basically welcome anything that involves being dirty or bloody or shooting guns.
I always say that the characters in Jane Austen’s original books are rather like zombies because they live in this bubble of immense wealth and privilege and no matter what’s going on around them they have a singular purpose to maintain their rank and to impress others.
I do like the zombie movies quite a bit. I know there are purist zombie guys that don’t like the running zombies, but I dig the infected thing. I think that’s a scarier incorporation of an element into the genre.
I do enjoy Gothic fiction or books about zombies if they are well written and I like vampires.
Zombies, mummies – they’re disgusting and gross. You don’t want to make out with a mummy. At least, I don’t.
In entertainment, zombies are so played out. I have a gut sense that people are getting tired of apocalyptic scenarios.
Zombies cannot run.
Man, I don’t read books! I just read a bunch of ‘Walking Dead’ comics. I don’t even read comics, but zombies are something I just can’t get enough of.
Zombies are a fairly new addition to the cannon of monsterdom. Really, the modern zombie goes back just to the ‘Night of the Living Dead.’ There’s a ton of material out there, but it seems like there’s not a lot of diversity out there.
I’m like my zombies. I won’t stay dead!
Turning a zombie pandemic into a generic disaster movie robs the zombies of their dirty, nasty edginess and robs the disaster of its epic scope.
I like ‘Futurama.’ That’s kind of the only thing that’s my sci-fi thing, although I was big into zombies for a time.
‘Cockneys vs. Zombies’ does exactly what it says on the tin.
Poetry is emotion, passion, love, grief – everything that is human. It is not for zombies by zombies.
Zombies are so popular. There’s a lot of chaff out there. For every one person who is legitimately passionate about zombies, there are a hundred people who are thinking, ‘Hey, I can make a buck off of this.’ The problem is that some of their stuff is so lame.
I happen to like vampires more than zombies.
Vampires get the joy of flying around and living forever, werewolves get the joy of animal spirits. But zombies, they’re not rich, or aristocratic, they shuffle around. They’re a group phenomenon, they’re not very fast, they’re quite sickly. So what’s the pleasure of being one?
I have played games like Angry Birds and, you know, Plants vs. Zombies and things like that just for fun on the phone and everything.
The more Mommy blogs going nuclear over playground etiquette I read and birthday parties of glazed adults munching cupcakes like demoralized zombies I attend, I realize this is what my friends who conceived before me meant by, ‘You just won’t care.’
I will never make a film where zombies are threatening to take over the planet.
That’s what we wanted to get across in that moment, particularly when Shaun goes to the shop when he’s all hung over. He doesn’t notice any of the zombies around him just because he never had before, so why should he at that point?
I think that’s the great thing about zombies, is, you know, going back to even ‘Night of the Living Dead,’ they’ve always been a tool for kind of holding up a mirror to us and showing us something about ourselves that we might not otherwise know.
I love zombies. I don’t know how else to answer that… I have trouble falling asleep, so there are certain scenarios I use in my head to relax. I find sniping zombies very relaxing.
Folks, the zombies are not on television – they are in Washington, D.C., and they meet at the Capitol Hill Club and call themselves ‘Realists.’
My zombies will never take over the world because I need the humans. The humans are the ones I dislike the most, and they’re where the trouble really lies.
I like zombies; I like them fine. But I don’t have a long list of zombie movies or books that are among my favorite things in the world.
‘Feed’ is about zombies and politics and blogging. It’s about how George Romero actually saved the world! It’s ‘Night Of The Living Dead’ meets ‘The West Wing.’
I’ll never get sick of zombies. I just get sick of producers.
I’m a huge Zombies fan.
Zombies are apocalyptic in nature. They belong to a class of monster that doesn’t just hunt humans, but seeks to obliterate that entire human race.
Zombies, what are you going to do with them? Just keep chopping them up, shooting at them, shooting at them.
I also have always liked the monster within idea. I like the zombies being us. Zombies are the blue-collar monsters.
Zombies are kind of a perennial.
If there had been zombies on the iceberg when the Titanic hit it, that would have made a much better movie.
We are going to do ‘Hot Tub’ until we die. Every Monday. Then we’ll come back and do it as zombies. ‘Hot Tub’ is very important. What we do is based on our live skills. It’s stand-up and sketch and improv; everything we do in ‘Hot Tub’ is important to our jobs. And every Monday I’m excited to do it.
There is no story that can’t be improved by adding zombies.
I have a soft spot in my heart for the zombies.
I would like to do a horror film with zombies!
I love zombies, and I love playing zombie-killing video games, so I was always super into the zombies, seeing how it all works and seeing the blood everywhere. I love that kind of stuff.
I always thought of the zombies as being about revolution, one generation consuming the next.
With slow-moving zombies, what always comes at stake is our humanity.
I think the existence of zombies would contradict certain laws of nature in our world. It seems to be a law of nature, in our world, that when you get a brain of a certain character you get consciousness going along with it.
Zombies to me don’t represent anything in particular. They are a global disaster that people don’t know how to deal with.
If I was in a zombie apocalypse, I wouldn’t be playing music, because that would attract zombies.
When I started writing, there was nothing about zombies. It was all teen movies, which to me are scarier than zombies, but that’s another story.
You kind of just float inside of your sleeping bag and you attach your sleeping bag to the wall. Then our arms kind of float up. So, we look a little bit like zombies.
I think it’s cyclical. Zombies have been around for ages, and vampires have run their course; we’ve had so many vampire movies.
My stories are about humans and how they react, or fail to react, or react stupidly. I’m pointing the finger at us, not at the zombies. I try to respect and sympathize with the zombies as much as possible.
The trend today is vampires, zombies, angels, all the stuff that puts me right to sleep. It’s too bad because it’s so much less interesting than the diversity of stories you can tell with science.
I actually have a very real, irrational fear of zombies.
Zombies sort of typify this ambiguity, that they’re not dead and not alive.
As movie monsters go, zombies are the most human. They were human at one time. So we are confronted with ourselves in a way, which is much more frightening and disturbing.
I can’t really make fun of zombies. They’re not liars. They’re not cheats.
I’ve never read ‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies,’ although I certainly know what that is. And what I love about that concept is as much as it’s a zombie story, it’s also ‘Pride and Prejudice.’
Because the idea of zombies seems to make sense, and seems to, in a certain sense, be possible, I think one can use that to argue against the thesis that everything is purely physical. Now many people, I think, agree that the idea of zombies are conceivable, including people who want to be physicalists.
The Zombies were really unique – they had elements of jazz and classical music in their songs and songwriting. They had a very, very different sound compared to a lot of their contemporaries at the time.
It’s the smartphone that has turned adults and children alike into tech-addicted zombies, dumbly swiping and jabbing at their screens, oblivious to the world around them.
Regency romances end in marriage; zombie stories end in the zombies being vanquished. ‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies’ delivers both.
Zombies have no memories of their former life. You wont see the undead trying to wash windows or do your taxes. All they know how to do is swarm and feed.
I keep a little notebook of things that I can do to the zombies that might be silly and fun.
I’ve always loved the genre of virus movies or Armageddon movies – anything that involves being trapped with the cute boy in detention when the zombies are attacking.
I have a screened in porch, and it’s nice to curl up with a book outside when it’s raining, especially an old battered classic like ‘Pride & Prejudice & Zombies.’
I sympathize with the zombies and am not even sure they are villains. To me they are this earth-changing thing. God or the devil changed the rules, and dead people are not staying dead.
Pages: 1 2