Imagine the Korean version of Murder in Successville, but with tons of zombies. Zombieverse is full of scares, shocked celebs and some TV trickery that is hilarious – unwittingly

British viewers coming cold to Zombieverse, Netflix’s new Korean “reality” series, will have a blissful few minutes where they are not sure what they are watching. Well, it’s not that blissful, or I wouldn’t be about to spoil it by explaining, but there is a moderately pleasurable period of dizzy confusion as five people meet in what seems to be the green room of a dating show. On set, the “host” explains the premise, which involves men and women meeting in a bar and immediately getting off with one another – but one of the women is behaving oddly. As our five new pals watch on a monitor, wide-eyed, this singleton starts behaving very oddly indeed, biting her date until his jugular spurts. Bloody hell.

She’s a zombie! It’s a zombie apocalypse! The five are stooges, contestants not on a dating show but in an immersive horror-reality series that elaborately convinces them they are the survivors of an outbreak of flesh-munching undead-ery in Seoul, then corrals them into various life-or-death scenarios as they scream and scheme in an effort to remain alive.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Race for space’ fuels surge in UK property prices

Nationwides puts annual rise at 10.9%, its highest rate for seven years,…

Liz Truss appoints James Bowler to top Treasury role

Bowler becomes permanent secretary at Treasury after apparent reversal of plans to…

Allman Brothers

Dickey Betts, dickie betts