As 28 Years Later hits cinemas, how zombie films infected pop culture like little else
From Night of the Living Dead to 28 Years Later via The Walking Dead and The Last of Us, the zombie genre shows no signs of dying

The Rage Virus is, well, all the rage once more, as the much-anticipated 28 Years Later tears its way into cinemas this week.
In the 23 years since the release of Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later, zombies and the infected have invaded pop culture like no one could have predicted.
No one should therefore be surprised the series is back. Certainly not George A. Romero, the director of 1968’s Night of the Living Dead, the grandfather of all zombie movies, which set the template by using horror to explore societal tensions in late-’60s America.
Already irked that Boyle and Snyder’s films featured zombies capable of running, Romero was aggrieved that studios had begun to see the profitability in zombie films while he struggled to get Land of the Dead made.