(2/14) ZOM 100: Bucket List of the Dead begins with our put-upon protagonist, Akira, as an employee of a wildly abusive corporation. After years of labour with zero free time, it's a great relief when a zombie outbreak happens! Akira is suddenly free to live life to the fullest.
(3/14) Akira has spent the last couple of years being drained of all his creative drive and optimism. You really feel good for him when he realizes that he no longer has to go to work, and can start making the most out of life! First by cleaning up his garbage-covered apartment.
(4/14) While much of the comedy comes from Akira's reaction to the horrifying situations around him, the zombie threat itself is never played for laughs. Like the best horror comedies, the horror comes from the antagonists, but the comedy comes from the protagonists' reaction!
(5/14) Blessed with all of his newfound free-time (as the city burns down around him and hapless citizens are eaten alive) Akira decides to make the most of things by making a 100 item to-do list of everything he's ever wanted to accomplish, but never had the time.
Had to
Me trying to socialize after quarantine ends
PASCAGOULA HUMANOID APPRECIATION POST
Me: The perfect character design doesn't exis- Rakshas from Berserk:
"Our Sister of the Cuts" woodcut - 1541 - Magdeburg, Germany - Artist Unknown
I love chainsaw man
The Thing comic appreciation post
I really wish this scene had made it into The Thing 1982, as it for sure would have been an incredible creature showcase, but also because the frankly vicious implications of having Nauls crying for help say a lot about what exactly happens to someone when they're assimilated.