baddude1337 said:
The world is made entirely of zombies.. The infection is turning the zombies into humans.
Nalesnik said:
In the year 2055, computer AI and robot kinematics have advanced far enough where life-like androids are possible and are a common sight. We use them in almost every capacity possible, manual labour, scientific research, administrative positions, entertainment, pleasure *wink* etc.... Humanity is on the fast track for a new apex of society until... a viral computer virus infects the android population, and causes them to malfunction. They start to lose their higher brain functions, their hardware starts to rust, and their biological components rot. Now the androids' only goal is to survive using basic animal instinct, and the only way they can do that is to assimilate human flesh into themselves...
Yea, that's right, my idea is zombie robots, big whoop, wanna fight about it?
Mine exists somewhere between these two. With an added twist which appears that no one else has thought of.
My Zombies are the original voodoo types. They don't shamble, decompose, try to eat you, or even spread a virus. However, they do not have original thought, feel no pain, and they follow the orders of their sequestrationinst without question. They may have superhuman strength though.
The story is set in the nearish future, with a similar style of society; however with a much higher population. The prisons are overflowing, violent crime is on the rise, and due to a public international referendum, Capital Punishment has been outlawed in the International Court of Human Rights, set up by the UN.
However, a maverick anthropologist working in Haiti with one of the last 'witchdoctors' discovers a scientific basis behind the voodoo curse of Zombiefication. He (or she) takes this finding to an Anthropology Conference, and it is suggested that it might take up the burden of prisoners who are now permanently on (or off, depending on your view-point) death-row.
A trial run is set up, amid human rights protesting the ethics of the study, and it is found to be a huge success. The Zombies maintain intelligence, but no creativity, and can function almost as humans (they aren't robotic as the protesters imagined them to be.) The process just seems to pacify them so that they can be allowed to work in the real society. Their memories are intact, but not their personalities, so to speak.
The zombies are given work in menial tasks, and are far cheaper and mobile than even relatively sophisticated AI. Their devotion to their 'purpose' (Master's command) as the zombies themselves put it, plus their inability to feel pain and their strength, ironically makes them ideal policemen.
So the movie is setting itself up to be an examination on what it means to be human, and the rights of humans. As it stands, I think it could be an interesting movie.
However, we can add an interesting twist at the end of Act 2. The zombification is not permanent. After while, say a year or so, the zombies start to return to being human, or at least, thinking like one. But remember, they were all death-row inmates, who are now outside, and are regaining their minds. The zombification could even be increasing their aggression. Lets say that they keep their analgesia and their strength, making them now formidable foes. Although never issued firearms, they have the intelligence and strength to use whatever is available to exact their revenge on the society that trapped their minds.
TL;DR: Voodoo Zombies are used to alleviate an overcrowded prison system, which eventually backfires, starting deadly urban warfare between ordinary people and crazed, superhuman psychopaths.