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Wearing shorts and a T-shirt, he hustles in with a red face, which my checklist of symptoms indicates as a sign that he's "sick." Not infected with the zombie flu, mind you, just sick.
In 2003, Danny Boyle’s revolutionary zombie movie “28 Days Later” introduced the world to the Rage virus, a bloodborne pathogen that infects its host in seconds and turns them into a raving ...
Days Later didn't just give the zombie genre a shot of Rage Virus in the arm, but influenced countless post-apocalyptic films ...
Danny Boyle’s new 28 Years Later was fine as a standalone film but I don’t like it as an instalment to the 28 Days Later ...
The combination of climate change and pathogen expansion could be fueling a surge in infectious diseases. GEN consulted ...
Danny Boyle’s new 28 Years Later was fine as a standalone film but I don’t like it as an instalment to the 28 Days Later ...
NAD⁺, zombie cells and the battle against premature aging by Julie Nybakk Kvaal, University of Oslo edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan Editors' notes ...
The central themes of zombie movies are enduring for many reasons. Here, a survey of their history, from their origins in the 1930s to the present.
The symptoms of Hepatitis E can be similar to those of most of the other types that are known, which can include fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and even Jaundice.
In the standalone story, the zombie plague has infected every superhuman — except for the half-human/half-vampire Eric Brooks, a.k.a. Blade. The sword-wielding Daywalker is the last-living hero.