The Walking Dead: Behind the Series

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Study Aids, Book Notes, Art & Architecture, General Art
Cover of the book The Walking Dead: Behind the Series by Zaki  Hasan, Hyperink
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Zaki Hasan ISBN: 9781614649212
Publisher: Hyperink Publication: February 24, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink Language: English
Author: Zaki Hasan
ISBN: 9781614649212
Publisher: Hyperink
Publication: February 24, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink
Language: English

ABOUT THE BOOK

What happens after the end of the world? When all of society has collapsed, and any sense of safety is fleeting or illusory, is it possible to survive while still remaining fundamentally human – both literally and figuratively? It’s questions like these that have propelled AMC’s The Walking Dead in the ratings upon its record-shattering debut in fall of 2010. Since then, the series has been as irresistible and tasty for viewers as said viewers would be to the man-eating creatures in the show.

Adapted from a comic book created by Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead is a visually and emotionally visceral depiction of man’s downfall in the aftermath of a horrifying zombie apocalypse. Starring Andrew Lincoln in the lead role of Georgia sheriff Rick Grimes, the show is currently in the midst of its second season, and continues to enthrall audiences with its somber meditations on violence, religion, humanity, and inhumanity - all woven in with gut-wrenching (and gut-munching) bouts of zombie violence proving the very definition of “bloody good TV.”

MEET THE AUTHOR

Born and raised in Chicago before settling in the San Francisco Bay Area, award-winning writer Zaki Hasan is a professor of communication and media studies, and has been a media scholar and critic for more than fifteen years.

EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

After steadily building buzz upon its 2003 debut, the notion of transitioning The Walking Dead to the screen swiftly gained traction, especially with the recent release of 2004’s Dawn of the Dead remake, and Shaun of the Dead. George Romero’s return to zombie territory with Land of the Dead (2005) also proved the vitality of the genre. When pondering the possibility of his property becoming a movie or TV show, Kirkman said in a 2010 interview, “I wasn’t dying for it to happen. It was just, if it happened, that’s great.”

Finally, in late 2009, a live action television series based on The Walking Dead was announced as being in development by filmmaker Frank Darabont (no stranger to adaptations himself, having previously brought three Stephen King novels to the screen, including 1993’s The Shawshank Redemption) and producer Gale Anne Hurd (whose collaborations with famed director James Cameron on The Terminator and Aliens remain some of the most beloved and masterful mergers of sci-fi and horror of all time).

A longtime admirer of the genre, Darabont professed to interviewer Alan Sepinwall that he’d always had the “love of zombies” gene. An avowed fan of the comic series, he had been circling the property since as early as 2005. After several fruitless years of trying to sell various studios and production companies on the idea of a serialized, open-ended zombie epic – a fairly revolutionary idea at the time, Darabont joined forces with Hurd, who saw the same promise in the premise that he did...

Buy a copy to keep reading!

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

ABOUT THE BOOK

What happens after the end of the world? When all of society has collapsed, and any sense of safety is fleeting or illusory, is it possible to survive while still remaining fundamentally human – both literally and figuratively? It’s questions like these that have propelled AMC’s The Walking Dead in the ratings upon its record-shattering debut in fall of 2010. Since then, the series has been as irresistible and tasty for viewers as said viewers would be to the man-eating creatures in the show.

Adapted from a comic book created by Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead is a visually and emotionally visceral depiction of man’s downfall in the aftermath of a horrifying zombie apocalypse. Starring Andrew Lincoln in the lead role of Georgia sheriff Rick Grimes, the show is currently in the midst of its second season, and continues to enthrall audiences with its somber meditations on violence, religion, humanity, and inhumanity - all woven in with gut-wrenching (and gut-munching) bouts of zombie violence proving the very definition of “bloody good TV.”

MEET THE AUTHOR

Born and raised in Chicago before settling in the San Francisco Bay Area, award-winning writer Zaki Hasan is a professor of communication and media studies, and has been a media scholar and critic for more than fifteen years.

EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

After steadily building buzz upon its 2003 debut, the notion of transitioning The Walking Dead to the screen swiftly gained traction, especially with the recent release of 2004’s Dawn of the Dead remake, and Shaun of the Dead. George Romero’s return to zombie territory with Land of the Dead (2005) also proved the vitality of the genre. When pondering the possibility of his property becoming a movie or TV show, Kirkman said in a 2010 interview, “I wasn’t dying for it to happen. It was just, if it happened, that’s great.”

Finally, in late 2009, a live action television series based on The Walking Dead was announced as being in development by filmmaker Frank Darabont (no stranger to adaptations himself, having previously brought three Stephen King novels to the screen, including 1993’s The Shawshank Redemption) and producer Gale Anne Hurd (whose collaborations with famed director James Cameron on The Terminator and Aliens remain some of the most beloved and masterful mergers of sci-fi and horror of all time).

A longtime admirer of the genre, Darabont professed to interviewer Alan Sepinwall that he’d always had the “love of zombies” gene. An avowed fan of the comic series, he had been circling the property since as early as 2005. After several fruitless years of trying to sell various studios and production companies on the idea of a serialized, open-ended zombie epic – a fairly revolutionary idea at the time, Darabont joined forces with Hurd, who saw the same promise in the premise that he did...

Buy a copy to keep reading!

More books from Hyperink

Cover of the book Quicklet On Adele Faber and Elaine Mazlish's How to Talk So Kids Will Listen and Listen So Kids Will Talk by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Quicklet on Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Quicklet On Vanessa Steel's Punished (A mother's cruelty. A daughter's survival. A secret that couldn't be told.) by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Enron by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Quicklet on Brad Steiger and Sherry Steiger's Conspiracies and Secret Societies by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Thinking Like A Designer: Principles and Tools for Effective Web Design by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book The Best Book On Dating More After 40 by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Quicklet on Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (CliffsNotes-like Book Summary) by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Foods Known to Cause Cancer by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Natalie Portman: A Biography by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book Freedom or Submission: On the Dangers of Islamic Extremism & American Complacency by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book The Best Book On How To Barefoot Run by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book 30 Startups To Know Now: New Bay Area Companies with the Potential to Change the World by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book How To Save Money Buying A Car by Zaki  Hasan
Cover of the book The Life And Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." by Zaki  Hasan
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy