Use code ROANOKE50 to get 50% OFF your first Factor box at bit.ly/3HxaqDp Thanks for watching guys! Hopefully the Roanoke Tales video will be out today but its not looking great as I am also heading to a state park to camp for a few days so....Woof lol Have a good weekend!
Fun fact about how keen a humans sense of smell can be, in college we had this kid in our biology class who claimed he could track his mother and father in large stores like costco based off his sense of smell. So our professor set up a experiment this kid, Tim was blindfolded and had noise cancelling headphones on, and was put in a corn maze with his goal to find his mom and dad who had gone through and hid separately. We learned two things, he can absolutely track you by smell, and despite his weight, he can move fast as fuck. like not gunna lie, he didn't slow down, and he went through the corn mazes walls, like a blind deaf kool-aid man, fucking terrifying.
Could have just used a knife and saved the bullets. It wasn't established at all how to kill these things so I assume a few pones would work regardless of the area. I feel like the infected were just as stupid though. He's using a loud power tool yet when he looks threw the hole, they are literally looking at the ceiling walking around aimlessly. It feels like everyone other than the cat was on a different level of logic. The infected aren't even scary or threatening. If a curtain can disable one from literally doing anything, I question how the entire neighborhood was taken out but somehow this guy survived
Roanoke was confused why there were keys in the security office. Id imagine they're spare keys meant to be used by the owner or repair workers for getting into the rooms when the renter isn't home or isn't cooperating
In France buildings used to have a concierge, a worker at the entry with the key to everyone's (to receive packages, let the cleaning lady come in etc....) It is now only for a few higher end buildings, but still a thing.
Yeah. Security guy even lived in a special little apartment (that was honestly quite pitiful) in my last complex. Nothing odd here at all, except keys not being under lock.
Apartments in my area tend to have a master key that unlocks all the apartment doors. Ensures that they can let paramedics, fire department, or police enter in case of emergency.
Isn't this just a movie length, zombie as metaphor for moving on from a relationship? The party is his realization that she's for sure moved on which causes him to fall into depression (the zombie apocalypse). The old couple are symbols for the loss of the ideal future he saw this girl and his makin an altar to them is releasing it but honoring the memory. The zombie in the elevator is therapy. Sarah is rebound girl that doesn't work out but shows him that he's still gotta move on. The working out, the measuring food, playing music, etc is the kind of stuff you do to drag yourself out of a depression. The burning of the tapes is a symbolic relelease of what is holding him back. The final chase and what not at the end is accepting the painful and hard work of truly moving on, even though it's scary.
Never expected this movie to get covered. What a pleasant surprise. My headcanon is that the virus was a biological weapon used in a terrorist attack and that is why everything was so sudden, preventing security measures against infection from being taken. Also, the fact that they ignore animals (Like the cats), could reinforce the idea that the infection was designed to only affect humans and make the infected only attack uninfected humans. At least that's my take on this virus.
I mean Most viruses have a problem jumping species. It happens but it's very rare and depends strongly on the kind of virus. That doesn't really prove bioweapon, there is still a possibility of a long incubation time with a high rate of air spread.
well, there is always the possibility that sam is an asymptomatic carrier, so him not becoming a zombie is more a result of not displaying symptoms rather than not being infected, and there's a good chance that the other "survivors" were also asymptomatic, but couldn't survive the physical trauma of being mauled by zombies
Remember when he hallucinated himself outside? Sarah talking about making preparations to leave could be his subconscious telling him what he needs to do because he knows he needs to. He knows there's no way he can live there forever. As for the doctor zombie, it could represent him feeling trapped and adapting. This could be why he released the zombie before he leaves, because he himself is no longer trapped.
I just realized this is a Americanized/westernized version of a very good (Korean I think) horror movie. Also a movie moonlight was of this same concept in a lot of ways
Project zomboid has taught me that screaming can actually be a valuable tool as long as you also have a valid escape route or are in a safe spot. I would rather stand outside a building and scream to draw anything inside out than blindly go inside said building and get attacked
I was thinking like in State of Decay 2: set off a noisy lure like firecrackers or a boombox to draw zeds away from you & the house that contains an undead amalgamation of biomass that telepathically controls all the blood plague zeds & work on blowing that thing sky high undisturbed
And then have 200 other zombies in neighboring buildings coming out to get you too? Yeah great plan, I’m guessing that’s what happened in the first episode of the walking dead, some dude probably had the bright idea to lure zombie PZ style and every zombies within 500 meters came out of every building instead of just that one particular building.
You asked about water pressure. A lot of building have water towers on the roof, they provide pressure without power, and some refill themself with rain water.
Not to mention, often the power used for water and the power used for electricity isn't always the same source. Where I live, we have overhead lines for power, but the water pressure comes from the city which is all underground. So when the electricity company has to shut the power off, so long as it isn't power to the city's grid and just the overhead lines for buildings, we still have perfectly fine running water
Okay don't quote me on this but my middle school English professor once told me that one of the reasons why we don't tend to like the sound of our own voice is because it's a trait that helps us crave the sound of other people voices instead of settling for our own in a case of isolation
Thats interesting. The reason i had heard is because when we hear our voice when we talk, it vibrates throughout our skull, sounding different all together to us than to someone else. So when we hear a recording of our voice, we hear it as it is without that vibration, and it sounds a little too off. Similar to how when we see ourselves in the mirror its fine, but in a photo we look weird, because we're used to mirrors which "mirror" your face switching left to right. So the photo looks off to us.
Project Zomboid has a similar zombie disease infection. The first infection was airborne and a lot of people got infected which is what essentially shuts down the world, but you do have people who are immune to the airborne strain. The amount of people immune to the airborne is very small and they can still be infected through blood and saliva which is what happens in this movie. So it could just be that everyone was already being infected and Sam just happened to be very lucky (like he is throughout the movie XD)
Actually, no. The first infection was transmitted through bites and bodily fluids. It wasn't until it rapidly evolved throughout the course of a few weeks that everyone in the world except a very small percentage got infected. The only survivors in Project Zomboid's lore, including the PC, are immune to the airbone variant.
@@carlwheezer1640 I always wonder if it was maybe already airborne but people just didn't know it yet. Since there has to be a first infected and with every new infection the virus gets stronger like with real viruses. Hope they bring out some new lore pieces for the NPC updates to explain a bit more maybe XD
@@JosephLeeTheJoeLee as far as i know there were many with immunity to the airborne virus in Zomboid. However, the majority of immune people turned from bites and scratches early in the outbreak. Very few actually survived the first couple of days and weeks.
About the security office: Yes! Buildings in Europe will sometimes have a security guard/janitor hybrid position. This person usally has keys to all doors in the building and is sometimes given a flat to live in as part of the contract. It's a pretty sweet deal for everyone involved, as emergency maintenance services will be availiable basically 24/7 and the janitor gets to live in an area they wouldn't be able to afford otherwise!
I think Roanoke is in the minority here lol, I live in the U.S and do security for a living and it is very normal here as well. Especially in apartment complexes, we usually have keys that open all doors, or a master key that can open any door, I mean it's literally our job.
It's funny because in the WWZ book that one caveat caused the zombie infection in France when the guard and the other tenants/residents opened the door because they kept complaining about hearing non-stop groans and released the zombie inside it, a chinese guy that got bitten while escaping China and began to collapse when they arrived at the building, he told his wife to leave him behind because otherwise they would get deported both if she called Emergency Services, she escaped and locked the door, but that was just a patchwork solution to a semi-permanent trouble that people didn't really knew yet.
That point about people being social is so true. I am SEVERELY introverted and can go a long while without talking to other people. But back in college I had late night classes and work so I basically never got to see anyone and it started to take a toll on me.
I made it about 3 weeks not seeing anyone during lockdown before I really started feeling it. Went to the gas station just to have some sort of interaction.
I used to think I would be fine living without any other humans, until both of my dogs that I had grown up alongside passed away. I had never felt loneliness before, so it was a really strange sensation.
@@joshuagraham4782 That's not a very empathetic response. I get you were set on fire and thrown into the grand canyon but this person lost their dogs. At the very least, you could just say nothing at all lol.
As someone else said, this isn't really a zombie movie. It's a movie using zombies as metaphors (which is why things seems off, like no military and no other people and no planes). It's riddled with metaphors and symbols. The character does a lot of things that a person trying to move on does. He even talks about how he feels to his "zombie doctor", who gives random zombie reactions. He even meets Sarah, like a rebound relationship and she tells him he has to go. Metaphor wise, she's like a rebound relationship that he killed or even a past relationship OR if we wanted to be more symbolic she could be just that; a symbol telling him there's more out there (hence her photos of a loving family, showing him what he can have). Yes, I stand by the entire movie being a metaphore for moving on from an old toxic relationship and coming back from the dead and depression and letting go.
That feel when you watch a 50 min deep dive into the biology of zombies in a movie you haven't heard of let alone watched. Keep up the good work Roanoke!
I would love to see a movie handle that, maybe make it that the infection spread quickly but once it got on lockdown it started to disappear as the infected died of hunger and thirst lol
@@jasperj.d.g.4147 there are only so many humans to eat and after a 3 months the rest of it would either be gone, alive hiding or rotted away. Also the cat seemed chill with zombies, like most other shows, they dont eat animals
It really doesn't when we see them kill one person for one minute for a high angle. Majority of the time, they just wave their arms and kind of act stupid. A curtain literally disabled one. These are the less threatening infected I've ever seen in a movie
@@apatheticxmindsetx3549scary does not equate to dangerous. World war z (book) zombies are some of the weakest pieces of shit in all of zombie media yet soldiers and civillians during interviews always mentions the infected moaning being near deafening and the swarms of zombies being so demoralizing to the soldiers at yonker it partially leads to the defeat of the US military at yonkers. That’s scary. Not dangerous.
When I got covid earlier this year, I was stuck in my house completely alone for 2 weeks. I already suffer from very minor hallucinations related to some mental health issues I have (just tiny things like "oh it felt like someone poked me" or "I just heard my dog walk around but he's asleep next to me") and by day 6 I was sleeping with a knife under my pillow because multiple times I thought someone had broken into my house and had to convince myself that no one had. Isolation is insane. Keep in mind, 6 days of completely 0 contact with anybody.
The girl is probably his desire to leave and the trapped infected is probably his sentiment of being trapped in the building, as for the burning of the tape is the realization that he must move on
My best attempt at the deciphering of the symbolism in the movie with very limited context. The movie is symbolizing the process of a breakup, how it can feel like the end of the world sometimes. The main character begins with the breakup, demanding to have what he had before they were together. After getting his past back, he isolates himself, seeing the world as a dangerous and horrible place. He begins listening to the tapes of himself which represent his internal thoughts, and the zombie doctor I think is just a therapist. The young woman who gets shot represents the potential for a new relationship but because of his past trauma, he acts defensively and kills his chance at a new relationship. From this he fantasizes about what could have been and dwells on it until it helps him get through his reluctance to leave, as his fear of solitude has overpowered his desire for it. Also the drums I think are him acting out and wanting attention, after being isolated for so long he will do whatever it takes to get attention, sort of causing the world to be scary when it starts becoming safe again. (also I think the fact that he is in his exes house might represent their relationship as a whole, having to find the strength to leave the relationship even after she left a long time ago)
He looks like a real human. I doubt anybody irl would be able to go full rambo stabbing and dropping corpses off of balconies like nothing. I really like that.
Heade the dumbest decisionss that only self sabotaged his safety' and environment. No one was expecting him to jump go out and slaughter the infected if a curtain can neutralize one so easily, I'm sure he would have fine just being quiet in the 1:21 apartmenr
This really makes me think about babies who are neglected. Whether by choice or by circumstance, there are infants who are severely neglected without human contact. Do they hallucinate social interactions? My grandparents were foster parents and they took care of a baby girl born without half her brain. When they got her, they were told she was deaf, blind, and mentally impaired. They didn't know how to care for a special infant so they treated her like a normal infant. Turns out she was not blind or deaf. She lived a normal life afterwards (with normal cognitive activity) until her untimely death at 16 (or this is what I remember from the stories I was told).
There was an experiment done like this once by the Bad History People. They put a bunch of babies and raised them with minimal talking and social interaction because they thought the babies would develop some magic proto Atlantis language. The babies died, except for any that a nurse broke the rules and held and spoke to. We literally need it to develop and live. The babies had all the food and fluid they needed, they were kept clean and changed. They just didn't have socialization.
That is very interesting. So what about individual who have anti social behaviors. Does this experimental imply that these mental disorder cannot be genetically passed down
@@Aerex12 Antisocial behavioral disorders are inherently a mix of genetics and brain structure, with a variety of potential triggers like stress, trauma, and environmental factors like chemical exposure.
@Aerex12 depends. Generally their partner will interact with the baby, or family members will. Also you know that noise babies make? The loud wailing scream? It's very specifically designed to get their parents attention and annoy until you care for them even if just to make the sound stop. If even all that fails to get some cuddling and talking out of their caregivers then yes, the baby will struggle to thrive.
@@danielled8665 Being held as a baby actually releases chemicals to start the production of development itself. Perhaps a hold over from monkey days and something to do with children born in areas with little not taking up resources without putting the stress on other hominids?
I once spent a winter in PA by myself for a little over a month. Communicating to family only through text messages. I had a broken leg and had very little movement. Very slow internet, could do my streaming, and worst no heat. I had electricity but the house heat through gas and the tank was empty. This was around 2010. After week 3 I found myself talking to myself, a habit I have never dropped. About week 4 I started singing everything I was doing or feeling. Around this time I developed a deep paranoia of any movement of sound outside the window. I kept that paranoia for years afterward. It wasn't till family came up to the house that I talked to them that I noticed my voice was harsh and my throat hurt. My own voice scared me as it has noticed that while I was talking to myself all that time I actually wasn't saying anything. I had not spoken for at least 2 weeks but in my painkiller fueled delirium I was imagining my own voice. Made me a stronger man but fuck I wouldn't go through that hell again.
Sarah is a representation of a rebound after a relationship, this whole movie is basically describing what it’s like moving on after relationships, the party representing how it’s hard to make friends because of the break up, he may have lost them after been broken up with Fanny
In defense of him not making noise to see if there are any infected in the apartment, the first time he did it, he was in a hole up above and there was no possible way for any infected to reach him if there were any. If he were to yell while inside the apartment, they could possibly overwhelm him and he'd rather go in quietly to see if he could back out first without alerting them, he's trying to avoid confrontation at all cost.
I think the doctor shows how his own mind seems to be adapting to the apocalypse or the absolute loneliness of the apartment building, the doctor learns and evolves unlike Sarah who wanted to run away, which makes her human. So Sarah is human because of her will to be free while the doctor is infected/ a zombie because he has fully adapted to the new way of life. Burning all the cassettes probably is a metaphor for Sam to burn away his past and learning to adapt while running in the new world. Idk i might be wrong it's just how i thought of it
I think the doctor continuously having human interactions keeps him on the edge of humanity, unlike the other zombies who only ever interact with other zombies doing zombie things, so their humanity is just *poof*
"The doctor is starting to have human like responses now, like, even more so than normal", is a line that should not have made me laugh as much as it did.
The keys in the security office are spare keys that the landlord keeps incase the tenants lose theirs or don't return their copies or if they need to let the cops into the apartment for some reason. It's not just a Europe thing landlords here in the US do this too. It's more expensive to make a new key or replace the locks than it is to make a copy.
I lived alone at my parents ranch for winter/fall one year and it started to really get to me. I would hear people whisper my name sometimes. Totally freaked me out and I realized it was time to go.
get some firecrackers or a bunch of pots and toss them out a window, the noise will drag some zombies outside closer but might also make zombies inside either yeet off balconies or draw the ones that aren't stuck inside out
If I had to take a gander, the movie is about Sam's inability to take charge of his own life. Even when the zombie apocalypse happened, he pretty much sat around and did nothing productive. He didn't even bother to look for his own family. Fake Sarah was that voice in his head that's telling him to do something. It wasn't until he looked through Sarah's things and saw she was actively doing stuff that he decided to take action. He was propelled by guilt to finally move on with life.
Final note: remember kids, boiling your water is not actually always going to make it safe enough to drink. Boiling it and catching the condensation in another vessel is the way to go for sterilizing water from the vast majority of contaminants. Quick note, on improvising this: large pot of water with the lid on top upside down, and a cup hanging from the handle of the lid by string. Boiled water will condense on the lid, side to the center because gravity, and drip into the cup hanging from the lid. Takes a while, yes, but it'll all but guarantee that waters clean.
Europe person here: its common for appartement complex to have a janitor/security/repair guy. They actually live in the complex and take care of the building. Those appartement complexes are all rented space aswell. They also have a master key i think
I thought you already did this movie but then I realized it was a different channel. And yes, the ending is symbolic. His past kept him anchored in place, and he needed to abandon his attachment to his past and focus on the future instead.
I actually think you're pretty spot on mostly with your narrative analysis. Going to his ex gf's for the tapes, not trying to escape while listening to the tapes, and the other metaphors you're seeing I would say are telling a story about how staying in one place surrounded by the dead past is not healthy. The corpses and zombies around him are good representations of the old, unimportant vestiges of a life that he is refusing to let go of. Even without the zombies, the act of going to an ex girlfriend's house in an uncomfortable social setting because his tapes are so important and then allowing himself to suffer further discomfort and indignities indicates that this character is clinging on to the past life he had and is more willing to suffer the slow rot of stagnation than the shorter and more passing suffering that is needed to move on. Your observation is legit my dood, you may not have fleshed it out in great detail but you were pretty on target👍 you're not as bad at it as you think you are
Maybe the virus is airborne, but there are people (like our protagonist and the girl) who are immune to the airborne strain, but can still be infected by bites, like what we have in Project Zomboid with Knox Infection?
Great breakdown! You mentioned wanting to know if certain characters/scenes were symbolic of something. Well, here's my take, just from what I saw in your summary: -the Doctor is a representation of his inability and fear of trying to escape. First, it being a zombie, representing what he fears most right now, second being that it's the only one "confined" that he talks to, and also how it seems to humanize over the course of the movie could be representing the worst outcome: him turning, trapped with nowhere to go for help. -the girl (despite being dead the whole time) represents his hope for escaping, and the last fragments of his humanity (more in the social/psyche sense, not physical). He Imprinted onto her character his hopes of escape and finding others, and did so until he could, somewhat, come to terms with the reality of the situation, at which point he finally realizes she's been dead this whole time. -the burning of the tapes, like most scenes like it, represents him letting go of the past and his old mindset ("can't leave, this is the safest place"), and finally choosing to, literally and figuratively, move on. This is also represented with how he releases the doc, and how the doc wanders into his previous sanctuary (leaving behind the old mindset, and pushing forward with a new one) Hope this helped!
If there's an allegory I'd say it's about depression and how at times he wants to live and makes smart, thought out choices. And when he's careless even if it's subconscious that's is his depression trying to make him fail
Sam's inability to move forward was a subtext. He couldn't move on with his ex, he couldn't leave that place, it's when she died that he decided to move forward
8:45 alot of apartment buildings have spare keys to all the units for security in case someone gets locked out of their unit or they have to enter for an emergency. awesome video btw
Please discuss the show "Day 5" about a "illness" that will kill you if you fall asleep. It's not to bad of a show that few have seen. Thanks and love your videos😊
Can I just say that I could listen to your voice forever? I don’t know the proper word for it, but it’s very soothing yet engaging. Hope you have a great day!
9:05 as a career security guy. Yes, once you work somewhere for more than about a year it starts to become your house. You hide food around the place, bring tools from home, stash a change of clothes. I've literally known a few to hide a cot.
Agree. A lot of people don't take mental wellness seriously. A tidy workspace/living area that's decorated to your liking can do wonders for your brain.
Sam hallucinates a woman he barely met as being a vocalist to match his music, that she's essentially 'perfect' for him and ends up representing his subconscious desire for companionship and freedom. When he burns his tapes it represents him moving on from the past, which he has essentially been clinging to by listening to his missing family. When he tries to get the cat, he's also trying to get companionship (and then in turn getting an infection and killing said cat in his anger) (or maybe he thinks its a mercy killing). He keeps the doctor in the elevator because he's so starved for attention and companionship he will take talking to a dead man, and probably, when the doctor begins to respond more human, it's just Sam imagining it like he imagined Sara to cope with the isolation. That, and it likely ties in with his descent into madness (his infection). The more human the doctor = the closer to zombie Sam is.
From 9:47 - 10:05 I chose option A: Open The Doors instead of B: being a complete idiot because being a idiot can cause a non-combative mistake that you can NEVER retry to fix like getting bit by an infected because you simply forgot to close the door behind you when you search, trying NOT to make noise, especially if the infected are known to be silent.
the first thing you do is to be very quiet and check every room before you start scavenging, also you should conserve ammo as best you can in a zombie apocalypse. So it would be far more preferable to have a knife that’s taped to a pole so you can kill the infected from a distance.🤔🐱
Depends on the guns, depends on the melee weapon. Merely taping the knife to the pole is a bad idea, just isn't structurally sound. If you can, try to remove the knife handle and cut a groove into the pole to insert the knife into. You would actually be better off with just a pole or affixing a heavy object to the end, and beating the zombie to death. A shovel-head is actually awesome for this.
You typically want guns to be conserved for living human threats rather than undead ones. Using long arm/pole weapons like mancatchers or spears with crossguards at the end is usually the best way to go if confrontation is unavoidable
If you have a gun use it, you’re clueless to how it spreads for the time being and the farther away you are from “it” and it’s blood the better and if you have the balls to stand up with multiple and a melee weapon you better cover up
@bn3421 most people don't have one, it won't help against guns, and depending on your area a machete would be the equivalent, but that last bit is more for readers than you. Also, a machete would be overall more useful.
My assumption was that it is an airborne virus, and some people are just immune, and in the case of the family, both parents would be immune and passed that to their kids.
My best interpretation is that the movie is an allegory for his emotional baggage with his ex, hence why he can't leave the building. The zombie in the elevator represents his desire to stay rotting in the past, and his hallucination of Sarah is the desire to move on. When he burns the tapes, and later the apartment he finally rids himself of his baggage, frees his trapped self and moves on. That's just my interpretation, though.
I saw your video on my feed and decided to watch the movie before your video. I have got to say, Sam is a very human character. Between his immediate response to the trashed apartment to his ultimate decision about the self-terminated elderly couple his actions make him a very real character in my book.
I wonder why in all of these zombie outbreaks zombies aren't just like eating food off of shelves. Why do they always seem to go after people? I think it would be much more realistic and probably actually even more terrifying to have the outbreak start with what people think are just widespread riots but then progress into a zombie outbreak because people don't recognize the threat
19:30 as someone who haven't socializated beyond small talk with my mother for months, as my last friendship fell apart from my own instability, can say that this was portrayed well accurately. My brain made so much shit up daydreaming without considering if I want that or not and during my half-awake sequences that I sometimes barely remember what was real and what was not.
for the keys the answer is that the security room is most likely the workroom for the appartment caretaker. They would 100% be in a safe normally and are there in case the tenants lose their keys or a emergency so the caretaker can let in the police or so on.
23:41 yeah I can totally agree when I was in the hospital to repair my leg at some point during the time I was there. I turned to look at my window that was reflected and said “what are you looking at” then I look at a mirror that to my nine o clock and said the same thing and i kept this up for fifteen minutes before cracking up laughing
I think subtext was Sam not getting over his ex and his older life and that's why he was so adamant about getting his tapes. Burning the tapes was like his first steps to moving on with his life and leaving his old life behind him. Sarah stood for the same , the idea of moving forward with life while the elevator zombie was like the reverse idea. Stagnation in comfort not willing to move forward
A man outright refuses to socialize at a party. His ex tells him to talk to people and reminds him that he left her. He witnesses people be dangerous and hurt others so he stays inside. The closest thing to a real relationship is talking to some old guy neighbor that he always catches in the elevator. When he gets an opportunity to truly connect with someone else, he blows his shot (heh) and hurts them out of fear that they'd hurt him. Fantasizes about this woman being some emotional savior and telling him he can't stay in one place forever and needs to move on. Burns what made him desire to be there in the first place. Makes himself vulnerable by letting the old neighbor in, pleasantly surprised that he was not hurt like he's seen other people be hurt. Takes the advice of his fantasy and moves on, saving himself.
can we just appreciate the editing ? S tier meme comedy, this guy is my favorite Big Brain Genius on the internet man hes hilarious while trying to keep things grounded in reality. props man you deserve more attention for your efforts
My favorite interpretation of this film is that it’s less of a zombie movie and more of a break up movie. And I think that excuses a lot of the more reckless decisions
I have ALWAYS complained about people clearing buildings. Make a bunch of noise! It just makes no sense to sneak in to a building potentially full of zombies, just to be sneak attacked by a horde, when I could literally just bang on the walls and attract the zombies inside. And if it pulls a horde too big to handle, *good*, that means I don't want to be in there anyways! Be stealthy when the situation calls for it, but I'll be damned if I think every room in a house should be checked silently. Love the video, good stuff.
Kinda depends on the situation, if i ran out of food or water etc. i might sneak in and see how much i can gather before i need to pull a fast one. Other than that id probally fear attracting infectes from behind me or something causing myself to be boxed in. That and being overwhelmed and losing the suprise factor. Id rather stab something in the back than face something which clearly knows im there. I guess it depends on the situation tho.
@@JustSomeDinosaurPerson If there's enough zombies on the block that they horde up from a bit of yelling and banging on walls inside a house, then it's better to know and get the fuck out before some fluke brings them about. That's just how I see it. Stealth is hella important, but if I'm scavenging I'd like to know my exits are clear and that the house and neighbors aren't going to come a knockin' when we inevitably make a mistake. Zombies aren't real so we'll never know which makes more sense. We are both likely right and wrong in more ways than we can count 🤷♂️ it's fun to discuss though.
@@thesaviorofsouls5210 I understand that sentiment. In many situations catching zombies unaware is the way to go. I just don't think it is the right way to do comprehensive searches, I'd be more focused on finding ways to move hordes and groups away from my scavenging spots to ensure a thorough check of each building. But you make the excellent point of dire circumstances, if I'm low on food and starving I probably can't out pace the horde.
I guess my thought process is if the neighbors outside can't hear me when I'm laughing loudly like a maniac on RUclips and doing house repairs, I should be good to bang on the walls once I'm inside to attract anyone or anything within. If there's a horde outside, then you are correct in my eyes not to be so loud, but if we're out where I live when the shit goes down, there's plenty of room between houses and tree lines that if I am going to scavenge, I'mma be kinda picky anyways. I just love zombies I appreciate y'all's input ^^
Just gonna say lol longest I've gone from actually physically talking to another human being as an adult was around 10 days iirc. I was completely fine though, idk maybe I'm just like the most introverted person that ever introverted lol but more likely is the fact that I grew up in a very rural area in Australia and after I got home from school when I was a kid it was like 2 or 3 hours before my mum got home from work so I always had like these big stretches of time where I didn't talk to other people and I just used to mostly go walking through the endless paddocks and forests that surrounded that property so I got very used to and very comfortable with my own company. Very interesting thought to say the least though. Love you stuff btw mate, keep up the epic work!
I imagine sarah and the doctor represent his grief, loneliness, and desperation, granted he is likely clinically insane by this point so I imagine its his last grip on humantiy trying to breakthrough, the part of his brain that still wants a reason to continue and not loose a grip on himself
Fairly sure that "Security office" was like the local Super intendent or something , it's usually like a handyman that lives in the same building , and are trusted by the owner of the building to have spare keys to all the apartments for inspection, repair and other legal reasons.
Great video. I loved the take on it all. Id love to think I'd be fine 100% on my own, but i drove from Detroit to Boise and it took me 32 hours, and by the end of that third day, I was singing loudly to myself (rare at the time), talking out loud my thoughts as if they were TO someone, and feeling weird altogether. I spent a long time depressed and isolating myself from friends prior to this, and it was a wake up call to me. I still sing more than I used to lol. And I'm far from all of my family and my old friends. But I see them once a year, and I've made new friends. All this to say, isolation is no joke. It sounds pathetic in words to some, maybe, but you don't know til you've felt it. Mine was self inflicted (and mental health related) but this does a great job connecting the movie to our real world connections to them.
Roanoke imagine that feeling you had during Thanksgiving break - and now extrapolate that for my entire adult life. It isn't so much lack of socialization but prior mental diagnoses and isolation. But that pit of your stomach feeling I've realized I have even when among people when I get stuck in the normal downward spiral of negative thoughts. Isolation versus solitude my friend. Thefein lay the true difference. Finding that can actually be quite dangerous, Al jokes aside. Almost how taking LSD is risky for the same reason. Love to hear your thoughts. Not trying to be a downer, maybe the human condition is how I feel my "d3fault" mode is but over the years I have found it easier tk get bCk on the path of progression and self improvement. Be well brother.
French person here. So this office is the "concierge" office. It's your do-everything-man in older French building. They live for free on the property (but the pay is trash). They are responsible for package delivery, arranging for workers to come in the building, and having a copy of your keys in case a worker needs to be let in or you lost your key.
Alfred is a hallucination, This is MC's way of dealing with his animalistic side. He felt trapped, caged. Him releasing Alfred is him setting himself free from his own prison. That's why Alfred doesn't attack and you don't see him again.
If you are interested in checking out a manga or a book (as a momentary change of pace from movies and video games), I would love to see you cover Guts from Berserk and try to figure out just what lucky genetic dice have to be rolled for him to do even half the things he does, Pre-Eclipse of course, since there be some magical nonsense after that event. Alternatively, I also would love to see you take a look at the Blackwing Virus from Star Wars: Death Troopers, the only true horror story in that IP as far as I know.
When it was revealed Sarah was dead the whole time I literally cried. I cannot imagine living in a world like this I'm not mentally capable of such an existence, gosh depression is in many ways the biggest threat to humanity
His subconscious mind is doing what it's supposed to. Trying to keep him alive by any means necessary. The apathy a situation like that can cause would be powerful, overwhelming perhaps, to a lone mind. The sequence where he is hallucinating her is his subconscious fighting with the stubborn and equally great fear he has of leaving. Of finding out what he thinks he knows, but is afraid to confirm. The thing that pushed him to confront himself in such a way, was probably the unintentional killing of the girl. It was an accident. He couldn't cope. He also knew that staying there longer, he would go mad and starve. This was the last ditch effort of his subconscious, primal mind, to save his life. Edit: letting go of fear, the past. Embracing hope that he gained from knowing the girl had survived, etc, etc. that's the basics of what I saw. There is more that could be said, but I hope it addresses your question @20:00. Thanks for the video. I enjoy your breakdowns and video style.
10:00 the best idea would be to get a box of glasses or christmas ornaments from sombodies apartments, maybe those old people who had a mind blowing experience could lend us some, but then just open the door, toss a few glasses in, and see if anything reacts.
I would love to see an apocalypse film with competent and rational survivors. The only horror film i can recall with genuine smart people and rationale is the thing Im also extremely introverted, but i love being with friends and family, so even if i were isolated like Sam id be ok for a while but id genuinely struggle
To be fair Sam is actually pretty damn competent for your average joe. He's very smart when clearing the building at the start with none of the typical "woopsie!"'s the genre is so known for and after clearing the building he begins rationing out his food supplies from day one, The Martian didn't move to it that quickly! Sams fuck ups start around the cat incident and I think it was very purposeful, showing that a genuinely intelligent guy was having a full on mental breakdown from the months of isolation. I mean it's no spoiler to say he's pretty out of it by the end but in this case I think it's totally warranted. Like, think about it, how well would your mental state be if it had been almost a year and you hadn't heard so much as a peep to suggest there was anyone left alive or any aid; military or otherwise coming for your trapped, lonely, starving ass? Most would be losing it well before then and we do see Sam start to make fuckups after the cat. This is a long way of saying Sam probably IS up there with those in the Thing as being pretty rational. But like all of us super long social deprivation and a complete sense of your fate being hopeless is going to fuck with your brain. I mean I have agoraphobia and NEVER leave the house except to go to doctors but I think I'd still go a little stir crazy knowing that the world around me was gone after a while. Edit: And before anyone points out that he went into two apartments Roanoke is sort of cherry picking here. Sam actually does a fair bit of other smart stuff while clearing the building and yes, while he does fuck up that one time the first time he doesn't anymore else, including the second apartment. If you go watch the movie while it probably would be smarter to do as Roanoke said to funnel them with sound Sam still DOES check every corner in that apartment and is much slower about it before he starts looking through what's there.
Its this way in every city but apartment buildings will almost always have keys to every home in the case of a domestic or fire or if a tenant gets mugged or any number of other reasons.
I don’t know anything about French gun laws but if it’s anything like the UK or Sweden, I have no idea how that old man was able to get his hands on a “double barrel force multiplier” when he lives in a flat/apartment in the middle of a city
@danielled8665 Well in the UK you can't actually get permission for owning a firearm if you live in a flat/apartment, usually because of the rules of how to store them (gun safe bolted to concrete, with the ammo kept in a safe in another room, also bolted to concrete), can't be met. Though the UK is actually much more strict than other European nations, so maybe France is more lenient.
@Insert Name legally sure, but old guy moves from his house in the country to an apartment in his old age, you bet he's bringing his boom stick to remember his youth. XD
@@danielled8665 No, at least in the UK as the gun licence is not just tied to a person they are also tied with your address. In the UK if you are taking your firearm off of your property is a crime unless you have submitted the forms that require you to disclose where you are going, why you are taking the firearm, what ammunition you are taking and how much of it you are taking, the times you will be travelling, and the exact route you are taking. If you fail to disclose any of that information or deviate from your stated travelling plans then that’s a crime, the forms with that information have to be submitted to the council and the police, you must have permission from both before you can take your firearm off your property
Well, I already talk to inanimate objects, so, I think my transition to insanity would be rather smooth. So far, nothing has answered back. I think I'm still in the green.
the reason the father doesnt drive away 6:36 is because the wife was going to be the one driving. the steering wheel is on the left side in France. so i guess the wife was the driver in the family.
honestly i love this movie. its not about some professional survivalist who somehow knows exactly what hes doing, its just some guy making mistakes and actually acting like a human in a stressful environment. it makes the whole thing a lot more believable
So about the keys, they could be spare keys but another realistic option (one that I've experienced firsthand) is that they keys are kept in the building as a *fire safety tool.* Let me explain; so to make sure everyone gets out of the building in a fire emergency whoever is at the front desk (or security office in this case) will grab all the keys and leave, then log who is out of the building (Since you leave the keys with them when you leave, all the keys they have are for rooms that will have nobody inside.) that way when they do a head count to see who has come out of the building they'll know if a particular room is either a: empty or b: has a passed out potential resident in it.
I kind of like how, as opposed to many other zombie movies, here the weapon actually makes things worse. He shot the cat in anger, he almost shot himself by accident and he killed the only other person he may ever meet.
Use code ROANOKE50 to get 50% OFF your first Factor box at bit.ly/3HxaqDp
Thanks for watching guys! Hopefully the Roanoke Tales video will be out today but its not looking great as I am also heading to a state park to camp for a few days so....Woof lol Have a good weekend!
Interesting fact : 17lbs is about the same weight as a human head tests were done using water displacement and it came to about 17lbs.
What was that you flicked at 2:15?
Please make a video about how does Mutagen Works in tmnt 🐢🐢🐢🐢
YEET!
Concerneding the zombies didn't attack the cat I'm just wondering why Sam didn't just try to lure in the cat?
Fun fact about how keen a humans sense of smell can be, in college we had this kid in our biology class who claimed he could track his mother and father in large stores like costco based off his sense of smell. So our professor set up a experiment this kid, Tim was blindfolded and had noise cancelling headphones on, and was put in a corn maze with his goal to find his mom and dad who had gone through and hid separately. We learned two things, he can absolutely track you by smell, and despite his weight, he can move fast as fuck. like not gunna lie, he didn't slow down, and he went through the corn mazes walls, like a blind deaf kool-aid man, fucking terrifying.
Zombie special infected, right there.
Makes sense. The human body excretes pheromones and if he has a advance heightened sense of smell he can do it
OH, YEAH!!!
That fucker is a mini boss in the making if an actual zombie outbreak ever happens
@@SyedTauhidul 😂😂😂
Out of all the stupid stuff he did throughout the movie, making a small hole in the doors to take out the zombies was genius
Right that down, Patrick, write that down
@@bones0013 write*
@Tanker00v2 ok
Could have just used a knife and saved the bullets. It wasn't established at all how to kill these things so I assume a few pones would work regardless of the area. I feel like the infected were just as stupid though. He's using a loud power tool yet when he looks threw the hole, they are literally looking at the ceiling walking around aimlessly. It feels like everyone other than the cat was on a different level of logic. The infected aren't even scary or threatening. If a curtain can disable one from literally doing anything, I question how the entire neighborhood was taken out but somehow this guy survived
Idea weight on rope + height
Roanoke was confused why there were keys in the security office. Id imagine they're spare keys meant to be used by the owner or repair workers for getting into the rooms when the renter isn't home or isn't cooperating
In France buildings used to have a concierge, a worker at the entry with the key to everyone's (to receive packages, let the cleaning lady come in etc....)
It is now only for a few higher end buildings, but still a thing.
Yeah. Security guy even lived in a special little apartment (that was honestly quite pitiful) in my last complex. Nothing odd here at all, except keys not being under lock.
Apartments in my area tend to have a master key that unlocks all the apartment doors. Ensures that they can let paramedics, fire department, or police enter in case of emergency.
As a European Roanoke consumer, I can say: what? This is not a thing here in the Netherlands. At least not that I know of...
Roanokes the type of white person that has never been near a apartment that's how Apartments mostly Work in America to partner
Isn't this just a movie length, zombie as metaphor for moving on from a relationship? The party is his realization that she's for sure moved on which causes him to fall into depression (the zombie apocalypse). The old couple are symbols for the loss of the ideal future he saw this girl and his makin an altar to them is releasing it but honoring the memory. The zombie in the elevator is therapy. Sarah is rebound girl that doesn't work out but shows him that he's still gotta move on. The working out, the measuring food, playing music, etc is the kind of stuff you do to drag yourself out of a depression. The burning of the tapes is a symbolic relelease of what is holding him back. The final chase and what not at the end is accepting the painful and hard work of truly moving on, even though it's scary.
Congratulations, you figured it out. Everybody who talks about this movie never realizes it.
never thought about it you're right
That's amazing
Thank you for sharing.
yeah usually zombie movies are either two things: Gore fest
or using Zombies as a metaphor.
Never expected this movie to get covered. What a pleasant surprise.
My headcanon is that the virus was a biological weapon used in a terrorist attack and that is why everything was so sudden, preventing security measures against infection from being taken. Also, the fact that they ignore animals (Like the cats), could reinforce the idea that the infection was designed to only affect humans and make the infected only attack uninfected humans. At least that's my take on this virus.
I think that makes sense
This movie is based off of #Alive the original Korean version.
Just this French guy is more I guess stupid?
I mean
Most viruses have a problem jumping species. It happens but it's very rare and depends strongly on the kind of virus. That doesn't really prove bioweapon, there is still a possibility of a long incubation time with a high rate of air spread.
true, but them ignoring the animals can just mean the infection is unable to pass the species barrier. happens in nature way more often than not
I feel like animals, specially cats are too silent to alert the infected.
well, there is always the possibility that sam is an asymptomatic carrier, so him not becoming a zombie is more a result of not displaying symptoms rather than not being infected, and there's a good chance that the other "survivors" were also asymptomatic, but couldn't survive the physical trauma of being mauled by zombies
That's what I was thinking too
So like the main cast of Left 4 Dead.
I actually think him wanting to go to the church is a sign he turned, since he's attracted to noise.
For tl;hr Immune to the bites, but not immune to being torn limb from limb
J /😊
Remember when he hallucinated himself outside? Sarah talking about making preparations to leave could be his subconscious telling him what he needs to do because he knows he needs to. He knows there's no way he can live there forever.
As for the doctor zombie, it could represent him feeling trapped and adapting. This could be why he released the zombie before he leaves, because he himself is no longer trapped.
maybe the zombie doctor was an hallucination as well.
U just regurgitated what Roan said.
I just realized this is a Americanized/westernized version of a very good (Korean I think) horror movie. Also a movie moonlight was of this same concept in a lot of ways
@@RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvus wrong. The #alive korean shitfest is the remake of this.
The french is the OG version based on a book
@@RomanvonUngernSternbergnrmfvusFactcheck next time plz
Project zomboid has taught me that screaming can actually be a valuable tool as long as you also have a valid escape route or are in a safe spot. I would rather stand outside a building and scream to draw anything inside out than blindly go inside said building and get attacked
Seriously 20 zombies out in the open tend to be safer than 2 or 3 zombies locked in the bathroom of a building you are trying to clear.
I was thinking like in State of Decay 2: set off a noisy lure like firecrackers or a boombox to draw zeds away from you & the house that contains an undead amalgamation of biomass that telepathically controls all the blood plague zeds & work on blowing that thing sky high undisturbed
In other words, strategic screaming
And then have 200 other zombies in neighboring buildings coming out to get you too? Yeah great plan, I’m guessing that’s what happened in the first episode of the walking dead, some dude probably had the bright idea to lure zombie PZ style and every zombies within 500 meters came out of every building instead of just that one particular building.
@@JohnPeacekeeper
The Baby Protocol
You asked about water pressure. A lot of building have water towers on the roof, they provide pressure without power, and some refill themself with rain water.
Not to mention, often the power used for water and the power used for electricity isn't always the same source. Where I live, we have overhead lines for power, but the water pressure comes from the city which is all underground. So when the electricity company has to shut the power off, so long as it isn't power to the city's grid and just the overhead lines for buildings, we still have perfectly fine running water
Parisian/french houses don’t have these water tanks. It’s all huge water towers dating back from the roman era.
The wind chimes he hears at the end of the movie imply that he didn't make it out of the building and was simply hallucinating a dramatic escape.
Neat point.
So he died?
@@jinbe_of_the_sea4577maybe 😅
Okay don't quote me on this but my middle school English professor once told me that one of the reasons why we don't tend to like the sound of our own voice is because it's a trait that helps us crave the sound of other people voices instead of settling for our own in a case of isolation
Thats interesting.
The reason i had heard is because when we hear our voice when we talk, it vibrates throughout our skull, sounding different all together to us than to someone else.
So when we hear a recording of our voice, we hear it as it is without that vibration, and it sounds a little too off.
Similar to how when we see ourselves in the mirror its fine, but in a photo we look weird, because we're used to mirrors which "mirror" your face switching left to right. So the photo looks off to us.
@@nopenothanks08 this is the reason I’ve heard as well.
@@nopenothanks08 this is correct.
never heard of that but it does make sense to my uneducated mind lol
for me it feels weird to hear my voice when I'm not talking. Like hearing someone that sounds like me just feels weird.
Project Zomboid has a similar zombie disease infection. The first infection was airborne and a lot of people got infected which is what essentially shuts down the world, but you do have people who are immune to the airborne strain. The amount of people immune to the airborne is very small and they can still be infected through blood and saliva which is what happens in this movie. So it could just be that everyone was already being infected and Sam just happened to be very lucky (like he is throughout the movie XD)
Actually, no. The first infection was transmitted through bites and bodily fluids. It wasn't until it rapidly evolved throughout the course of a few weeks that everyone in the world except a very small percentage got infected. The only survivors in Project Zomboid's lore, including the PC, are immune to the airbone variant.
@@carlwheezer1640 I always wonder if it was maybe already airborne but people just didn't know it yet. Since there has to be a first infected and with every new infection the virus gets stronger like with real viruses. Hope they bring out some new lore pieces for the NPC updates to explain a bit more maybe XD
@@JosephLeeTheJoeLee ahhh...Project Zomboid. I see you are also a person of culture.
It would make sense, considering you need extremely high amounts of luck to realistically survive this situation alone.
@@JosephLeeTheJoeLee as far as i know there were many with immunity to the airborne virus in Zomboid. However, the majority of immune people turned from bites and scratches early in the outbreak. Very few actually survived the first couple of days and weeks.
About the security office: Yes! Buildings in Europe will sometimes have a security guard/janitor hybrid position. This person usally has keys to all doors in the building and is sometimes given a flat to live in as part of the contract. It's a pretty sweet deal for everyone involved, as emergency maintenance services will be availiable basically 24/7 and the janitor gets to live in an area they wouldn't be able to afford otherwise!
I think Roanoke is in the minority here lol, I live in the U.S and do security for a living and it is very normal here as well. Especially in apartment complexes, we usually have keys that open all doors, or a master key that can open any door, I mean it's literally our job.
Wish we had that in the States...
In the states we call those “superintendents” and they exist in urban area apartments, especially the projects.
It's funny because in the WWZ book that one caveat caused the zombie infection in France when the guard and the other tenants/residents opened the door because they kept complaining about hearing non-stop groans and released the zombie inside it, a chinese guy that got bitten while escaping China and began to collapse when they arrived at the building, he told his wife to leave him behind because otherwise they would get deported both if she called Emergency Services, she escaped and locked the door, but that was just a patchwork solution to a semi-permanent trouble that people didn't really knew yet.
That point about people being social is so true. I am SEVERELY introverted and can go a long while without talking to other people. But back in college I had late night classes and work so I basically never got to see anyone and it started to take a toll on me.
True. There is a massive difference between choosing not to interact with people, as opposed to being prevented from interacting with them.
I made it about 3 weeks not seeing anyone during lockdown before I really started feeling it. Went to the gas station just to have some sort of interaction.
I used to think I would be fine living without any other humans, until both of my dogs that I had grown up alongside passed away. I had never felt loneliness before, so it was a really strange sensation.
Tuff
@@joshuagraham4782 That's not a very empathetic response. I get you were set on fire and thrown into the grand canyon but this person lost their dogs. At the very least, you could just say nothing at all lol.
Dogs give you the idea of a pack, so you could say you lose your family
@@michaelbeckett1 spot on. He could of at least said "ruff" to remind the guy of his beloved animals
@@joshuaanderson7511borf
As someone else said, this isn't really a zombie movie. It's a movie using zombies as metaphors (which is why things seems off, like no military and no other people and no planes). It's riddled with metaphors and symbols. The character does a lot of things that a person trying to move on does. He even talks about how he feels to his "zombie doctor", who gives random zombie reactions. He even meets Sarah, like a rebound relationship and she tells him he has to go. Metaphor wise, she's like a rebound relationship that he killed or even a past relationship OR if we wanted to be more symbolic she could be just that; a symbol telling him there's more out there (hence her photos of a loving family, showing him what he can have). Yes, I stand by the entire movie being a metaphore for moving on from an old toxic relationship and coming back from the dead and depression and letting go.
Zombies have ALWAYS been metaphors. The Night of Living Dead is literally about social commentary.
That feel when you watch a 50 min deep dive into the biology of zombies in a movie you haven't heard of let alone watched. Keep up the good work Roanoke!
Same. I havent seen an actual movie in years.
yeah, the only recent movie I watched lately was dirty blonde sluts, extended edition. Really great movie by the way.
God I hate how zombies just never starve to death in movies, while the survivours main issues is always food.
I would love to see a movie handle that, maybe make it that the infection spread quickly but once it got on lockdown it started to disappear as the infected died of hunger and thirst lol
@@carolusrex5213 24 days later did it well imo
Arent the zombies eating humans and other animals?
28 days later and 28 weeks later. They starve in those movies
@@jasperj.d.g.4147 there are only so many humans to eat and after a 3 months the rest of it would either be gone, alive hiding or rotted away. Also the cat seemed chill with zombies, like most other shows, they dont eat animals
Making the Zombies in this completely silent adds so much terror
It really doesn't when we see them kill one person for one minute for a high angle. Majority of the time, they just wave their arms and kind of act stupid. A curtain literally disabled one. These are the less threatening infected I've ever seen in a movie
@@apatheticxmindsetx3549scary does not equate to dangerous. World war z (book) zombies are some of the weakest pieces of shit in all of zombie media yet soldiers and civillians during interviews always mentions the infected moaning being near deafening and the swarms of zombies being so demoralizing to the soldiers at yonker it partially leads to the defeat of the US military at yonkers. That’s scary. Not dangerous.
When I got covid earlier this year, I was stuck in my house completely alone for 2 weeks. I already suffer from very minor hallucinations related to some mental health issues I have (just tiny things like "oh it felt like someone poked me" or "I just heard my dog walk around but he's asleep next to me") and by day 6 I was sleeping with a knife under my pillow because multiple times I thought someone had broken into my house and had to convince myself that no one had. Isolation is insane. Keep in mind, 6 days of completely 0 contact with anybody.
Glad you are feeling better, bud?
That's incipient paranoia right there.
Lay down the knife Tomar you're safe here
You should have a pet. Or call people you know for conversation.
The girl is probably his desire to leave and the trapped infected is probably his sentiment of being trapped in the building, as for the burning of the tape is the realization that he must move on
My best attempt at the deciphering of the symbolism in the movie with very limited context. The movie is symbolizing the process of a breakup, how it can feel like the end of the world sometimes. The main character begins with the breakup, demanding to have what he had before they were together. After getting his past back, he isolates himself, seeing the world as a dangerous and horrible place. He begins listening to the tapes of himself which represent his internal thoughts, and the zombie doctor I think is just a therapist. The young woman who gets shot represents the potential for a new relationship but because of his past trauma, he acts defensively and kills his chance at a new relationship. From this he fantasizes about what could have been and dwells on it until it helps him get through his reluctance to leave, as his fear of solitude has overpowered his desire for it. Also the drums I think are him acting out and wanting attention, after being isolated for so long he will do whatever it takes to get attention, sort of causing the world to be scary when it starts becoming safe again. (also I think the fact that he is in his exes house might represent their relationship as a whole, having to find the strength to leave the relationship even after she left a long time ago)
That's pretty deep, and I can see it
He looks like a real human. I doubt anybody irl would be able to go full rambo stabbing and dropping corpses off of balconies like nothing.
I really like that.
Heade the dumbest decisionss that only self sabotaged his safety' and environment. No one was expecting him to jump go out and slaughter the infected if a curtain can neutralize one so easily, I'm sure he would have fine just being quiet in the 1:21 apartmenr
This really makes me think about babies who are neglected. Whether by choice or by circumstance, there are infants who are severely neglected without human contact. Do they hallucinate social interactions? My grandparents were foster parents and they took care of a baby girl born without half her brain. When they got her, they were told she was deaf, blind, and mentally impaired. They didn't know how to care for a special infant so they treated her like a normal infant. Turns out she was not blind or deaf. She lived a normal life afterwards (with normal cognitive activity) until her untimely death at 16 (or this is what I remember from the stories I was told).
There was an experiment done like this once by the Bad History People.
They put a bunch of babies and raised them with minimal talking and social interaction because they thought the babies would develop some magic proto Atlantis language.
The babies died, except for any that a nurse broke the rules and held and spoke to. We literally need it to develop and live. The babies had all the food and fluid they needed, they were kept clean and changed. They just didn't have socialization.
That is very interesting. So what about individual who have anti social behaviors. Does this experimental imply that these mental disorder cannot be genetically passed down
@@Aerex12 Antisocial behavioral disorders are inherently a mix of genetics and brain structure, with a variety of potential triggers like stress, trauma, and environmental factors like chemical exposure.
@Aerex12 depends. Generally their partner will interact with the baby, or family members will. Also you know that noise babies make? The loud wailing scream? It's very specifically designed to get their parents attention and annoy until you care for them even if just to make the sound stop. If even all that fails to get some cuddling and talking out of their caregivers then yes, the baby will struggle to thrive.
@@danielled8665 Being held as a baby actually releases chemicals to start the production of development itself. Perhaps a hold over from monkey days and something to do with children born in areas with little not taking up resources without putting the stress on other hominids?
I once spent a winter in PA by myself for a little over a month. Communicating to family only through text messages. I had a broken leg and had very little movement. Very slow internet, could do my streaming, and worst no heat. I had electricity but the house heat through gas and the tank was empty. This was around 2010.
After week 3 I found myself talking to myself, a habit I have never dropped. About week 4 I started singing everything I was doing or feeling. Around this time I developed a deep paranoia of any movement of sound outside the window. I kept that paranoia for years afterward.
It wasn't till family came up to the house that I talked to them that I noticed my voice was harsh and my throat hurt. My own voice scared me as it has noticed that while I was talking to myself all that time I actually wasn't saying anything. I had not spoken for at least 2 weeks but in my painkiller fueled delirium I was imagining my own voice.
Made me a stronger man but fuck I wouldn't go through that hell again.
I feel ya on never dropping the habit and the paranoia of that, had something similar occur
The first part where the zombies shambling up the steps when they hear his voice made me more nervous than any zombie movie I've ever seen.
The half peeled face of his ex gf hastily shuffling in a panic to get inside to kill him disturbed me greatly.
@@feartheoldblood heebie fuckin jeebies, right?
A curtain would render them useless
That would just turn them into a spoopy ghost@@apatheticxmindsetx3549
That is actually very true. I dont know any zombie movie scene that unsettled me more
Sarah is a representation of a rebound after a relationship, this whole movie is basically describing what it’s like moving on after relationships, the party representing how it’s hard to make friends because of the break up, he may have lost them after been broken up with Fanny
In defense of him not making noise to see if there are any infected in the apartment, the first time he did it, he was in a hole up above and there was no possible way for any infected to reach him if there were any. If he were to yell while inside the apartment, they could possibly overwhelm him and he'd rather go in quietly to see if he could back out first without alerting them, he's trying to avoid confrontation at all cost.
Yeah, letting someone know of your presence when they can kill you in one swipe isn't the best idea.
I was thinking like knocking or banging on the front door would work.
I would say knock from the others side of the door and see if you can hear and count the footsteps to determine how many are inside.
Plus in the later rooms he also had a force multiplier so he was likely more confidant than before
15:02 It should have take him out. SCREW YOU SAM!! WHAT KIND OF MONSTER KILLS A CAT?!
I think the doctor shows how his own mind seems to be adapting to the apocalypse or the absolute loneliness of the apartment building, the doctor learns and evolves unlike Sarah who wanted to run away, which makes her human. So Sarah is human because of her will to be free while the doctor is infected/ a zombie because he has fully adapted to the new way of life. Burning all the cassettes probably is a metaphor for Sam to burn away his past and learning to adapt while running in the new world. Idk i might be wrong it's just how i thought of it
Surviving and adapting to any situation is the hallmark of a human.
Adaptation doesn't make someone a zombie.
I think the doctor continuously having human interactions keeps him on the edge of humanity, unlike the other zombies who only ever interact with other zombies doing zombie things, so their humanity is just *poof*
"The doctor is starting to have human like responses now, like, even more so than normal", is a line that should not have made me laugh as much as it did.
The keys in the security office are spare keys that the landlord keeps incase the tenants lose theirs or don't return their copies or if they need to let the cops into the apartment for some reason.
It's not just a Europe thing landlords here in the US do this too.
It's more expensive to make a new key or replace the locks than it is to make a copy.
I lived alone at my parents ranch for winter/fall one year and it started to really get to me. I would hear people whisper my name sometimes. Totally freaked me out and I realized it was time to go.
Remember, zombies are attracted to noises, so be silent and deadly, like a fart.
Also knock on doors to see if there's zombies inside
If a fart is what it takes, then I am the master.
get some firecrackers or a bunch of pots and toss them out a window, the noise will drag some zombies outside closer but might also make zombies inside either yeet off balconies or draw the ones that aren't stuck inside out
@@jimbothegymbro7086
Good idea but I'd use the fire crackers soaringly in case you wanna escape from zombies
remember: Zack don't knock
@@Hawkens4k cant you just buy more firecrackers later?
If I had to take a gander, the movie is about Sam's inability to take charge of his own life. Even when the zombie apocalypse happened, he pretty much sat around and did nothing productive. He didn't even bother to look for his own family. Fake Sarah was that voice in his head that's telling him to do something. It wasn't until he looked through Sarah's things and saw she was actively doing stuff that he decided to take action. He was propelled by guilt to finally move on with life.
Goes to bed and then wakes up to find the world ended while he was catching Zs! That will never not be a creepy twist.
Final note: remember kids, boiling your water is not actually always going to make it safe enough to drink. Boiling it and catching the condensation in another vessel is the way to go for sterilizing water from the vast majority of contaminants.
Quick note, on improvising this: large pot of water with the lid on top upside down, and a cup hanging from the handle of the lid by string. Boiled water will condense on the lid, side to the center because gravity, and drip into the cup hanging from the lid. Takes a while, yes, but it'll all but guarantee that waters clean.
Europe person here: its common for appartement complex to have a janitor/security/repair guy. They actually live in the complex and take care of the building. Those appartement complexes are all rented space aswell. They also have a master key i think
I thought you already did this movie but then I realized it was a different channel. And yes, the ending is symbolic. His past kept him anchored in place, and he needed to abandon his attachment to his past and focus on the future instead.
I actually think you're pretty spot on mostly with your narrative analysis. Going to his ex gf's for the tapes, not trying to escape while listening to the tapes, and the other metaphors you're seeing I would say are telling a story about how staying in one place surrounded by the dead past is not healthy. The corpses and zombies around him are good representations of the old, unimportant vestiges of a life that he is refusing to let go of. Even without the zombies, the act of going to an ex girlfriend's house in an uncomfortable social setting because his tapes are so important and then allowing himself to suffer further discomfort and indignities indicates that this character is clinging on to the past life he had and is more willing to suffer the slow rot of stagnation than the shorter and more passing suffering that is needed to move on. Your observation is legit my dood, you may not have fleshed it out in great detail but you were pretty on target👍 you're not as bad at it as you think you are
Maybe the virus is airborne, but there are people (like our protagonist and the girl) who are immune to the airborne strain, but can still be infected by bites, like what we have in Project Zomboid with Knox Infection?
Great breakdown!
You mentioned wanting to know if certain characters/scenes were symbolic of something.
Well, here's my take, just from what I saw in your summary:
-the Doctor is a representation of his inability and fear of trying to escape. First, it being a zombie, representing what he fears most right now, second being that it's the only one "confined" that he talks to, and also how it seems to humanize over the course of the movie could be representing the worst outcome: him turning, trapped with nowhere to go for help.
-the girl (despite being dead the whole time) represents his hope for escaping, and the last fragments of his humanity (more in the social/psyche sense, not physical). He Imprinted onto her character his hopes of escape and finding others, and did so until he could, somewhat, come to terms with the reality of the situation, at which point he finally realizes she's been dead this whole time.
-the burning of the tapes, like most scenes like it, represents him letting go of the past and his old mindset ("can't leave, this is the safest place"), and finally choosing to, literally and figuratively, move on. This is also represented with how he releases the doc, and how the doc wanders into his previous sanctuary (leaving behind the old mindset, and pushing forward with a new one)
Hope this helped!
whats the name of it xD
I also feel like locking the doctor away is giving himself some sense of control over his fear.
If there's an allegory I'd say it's about depression and how at times he wants to live and makes smart, thought out choices. And when he's careless even if it's subconscious that's is his depression trying to make him fail
Sam's inability to move forward was a subtext. He couldn't move on with his ex, he couldn't leave that place, it's when she died that he decided to move forward
8:45 alot of apartment buildings have spare keys to all the units for security in case someone gets locked out of their unit or they have to enter for an emergency. awesome video btw
Please discuss the show "Day 5" about a "illness" that will kill you if you fall asleep.
It's not to bad of a show that few have seen. Thanks and love your videos😊
Stargate SG1 did one of these :P
Can I just say that I could listen to your voice forever? I don’t know the proper word for it, but it’s very soothing yet engaging. Hope you have a great day!
I’ve seen this movie twice. Never noticed that door shaking at the start of the film.
Is it on Netflix or something? I can't find it
9:05 as a career security guy. Yes, once you work somewhere for more than about a year it starts to become your house. You hide food around the place, bring tools from home, stash a change of clothes. I've literally known a few to hide a cot.
I mean you're very right about making your surroundings look better. It literally saves me from hitting depression.
Agree. A lot of people don't take mental wellness seriously. A tidy workspace/living area that's decorated to your liking can do wonders for your brain.
Good idea. I should really clean my room thoroughly.
8:52 usually if you're renting the place there are spare keys in security office so they can open your door in emergencies
i think the zombie doctor is almost like his paranoia being "safe" in the apartment building and the girl is like his will to live.
Sam hallucinates a woman he barely met as being a vocalist to match his music, that she's essentially 'perfect' for him and ends up representing his subconscious desire for companionship and freedom. When he burns his tapes it represents him moving on from the past, which he has essentially been clinging to by listening to his missing family. When he tries to get the cat, he's also trying to get companionship (and then in turn getting an infection and killing said cat in his anger) (or maybe he thinks its a mercy killing). He keeps the doctor in the elevator because he's so starved for attention and companionship he will take talking to a dead man, and probably, when the doctor begins to respond more human, it's just Sam imagining it like he imagined Sara to cope with the isolation. That, and it likely ties in with his descent into madness (his infection). The more human the doctor = the closer to zombie Sam is.
From 9:47 - 10:05 I chose option A: Open The Doors instead of B: being a complete idiot because being a idiot can cause a non-combative mistake that you can NEVER retry to fix like getting bit by an infected because you simply forgot to close the door behind you when you search, trying NOT to make noise, especially if the infected are known to be silent.
the first thing you do is to be very quiet and check every room before you start scavenging, also you should conserve ammo as best you can in a zombie apocalypse. So it would be far more preferable to have a knife that’s taped to a pole so you can kill the infected from a distance.🤔🐱
Depends on the guns, depends on the melee weapon. Merely taping the knife to the pole is a bad idea, just isn't structurally sound. If you can, try to remove the knife handle and cut a groove into the pole to insert the knife into. You would actually be better off with just a pole or affixing a heavy object to the end, and beating the zombie to death. A shovel-head is actually awesome for this.
E-tool is invaluable imo
You typically want guns to be conserved for living human threats rather than undead ones. Using long arm/pole weapons like mancatchers or spears with crossguards at the end is usually the best way to go if confrontation is unavoidable
If you have a gun use it, you’re clueless to how it spreads for the time being and the farther away you are from “it” and it’s blood the better and if you have the balls to stand up with multiple and a melee weapon you better cover up
@bn3421 most people don't have one, it won't help against guns, and depending on your area a machete would be the equivalent, but that last bit is more for readers than you.
Also, a machete would be overall more useful.
My assumption was that it is an airborne virus, and some people are just immune, and in the case of the family, both parents would be immune and passed that to their kids.
My best interpretation is that the movie is an allegory for his emotional baggage with his ex, hence why he can't leave the building. The zombie in the elevator represents his desire to stay rotting in the past, and his hallucination of Sarah is the desire to move on. When he burns the tapes, and later the apartment he finally rids himself of his baggage, frees his trapped self and moves on.
That's just my interpretation, though.
I saw your video on my feed and decided to watch the movie before your video. I have got to say, Sam is a very human character. Between his immediate response to the trashed apartment to his ultimate decision about the self-terminated elderly couple his actions make him a very real character in my book.
I wonder why in all of these zombie outbreaks zombies aren't just like eating food off of shelves. Why do they always seem to go after people? I think it would be much more realistic and probably actually even more terrifying to have the outbreak start with what people think are just widespread riots but then progress into a zombie outbreak because people don't recognize the threat
That's an interesting idea for a zombie outbreak.
Would like to see thag ib a movie!
Because the zombies are undead and only eat out of reflex depending on franchise.
When you see a movie with that premise hit theaters someone is going to owe you a bit of money. 😂
@@alias234 thats still doesnt explain why they never eat something else
19:30 as someone who haven't socializated beyond small talk with my mother for months, as my last friendship fell apart from my own instability, can say that this was portrayed well accurately. My brain made so much shit up daydreaming without considering if I want that or not and during my half-awake sequences that I sometimes barely remember what was real and what was not.
for the keys the answer is that the security room is most likely the workroom for the appartment caretaker.
They would 100% be in a safe normally and are there in case the tenants lose their keys or a emergency so the caretaker can let in the police or so on.
23:41 yeah I can totally agree when I was in the hospital to repair my leg at some point during the time I was there. I turned to look at my window that was reflected and said “what are you looking at” then I look at a mirror that to my nine o clock and said the same thing and i kept this up for fifteen minutes before cracking up laughing
I think subtext was Sam not getting over his ex and his older life and that's why he was so adamant about getting his tapes. Burning the tapes was like his first steps to moving on with his life and leaving his old life behind him. Sarah stood for the same , the idea of moving forward with life while the elevator zombie was like the reverse idea. Stagnation in comfort not willing to move forward
A man outright refuses to socialize at a party. His ex tells him to talk to people and reminds him that he left her. He witnesses people be dangerous and hurt others so he stays inside. The closest thing to a real relationship is talking to some old guy neighbor that he always catches in the elevator. When he gets an opportunity to truly connect with someone else, he blows his shot (heh) and hurts them out of fear that they'd hurt him. Fantasizes about this woman being some emotional savior and telling him he can't stay in one place forever and needs to move on. Burns what made him desire to be there in the first place. Makes himself vulnerable by letting the old neighbor in, pleasantly surprised that he was not hurt like he's seen other people be hurt. Takes the advice of his fantasy and moves on, saving himself.
can we just appreciate the editing ? S tier meme comedy, this guy is my favorite Big Brain Genius on the internet man hes hilarious while trying to keep things grounded in reality. props man you deserve more attention for your efforts
My favorite interpretation of this film is that it’s less of a zombie movie and more of a break up movie.
And I think that excuses a lot of the more reckless decisions
“More than I deserve” Roanoke, people watch your content because we enjoy it, and we like you as a person, you definitely deserve it man!
7:05 love the well placed memes, my favorite is definitely the "hmm", always makes me crack a smile.
I have ALWAYS complained about people clearing buildings. Make a bunch of noise! It just makes no sense to sneak in to a building potentially full of zombies, just to be sneak attacked by a horde, when I could literally just bang on the walls and attract the zombies inside. And if it pulls a horde too big to handle, *good*, that means I don't want to be in there anyways! Be stealthy when the situation calls for it, but I'll be damned if I think every room in a house should be checked silently.
Love the video, good stuff.
Kinda depends on the situation, if i ran out of food or water etc. i might sneak in and see how much i can gather before i need to pull a fast one.
Other than that id probally fear attracting infectes from behind me or something causing myself to be boxed in. That and being overwhelmed and losing the suprise factor.
Id rather stab something in the back than face something which clearly knows im there. I guess it depends on the situation tho.
And then you attract every zombie from every block down around you on all sides and you are completed fucked.
@@JustSomeDinosaurPerson If there's enough zombies on the block that they horde up from a bit of yelling and banging on walls inside a house, then it's better to know and get the fuck out before some fluke brings them about. That's just how I see it. Stealth is hella important, but if I'm scavenging I'd like to know my exits are clear and that the house and neighbors aren't going to come a knockin' when we inevitably make a mistake.
Zombies aren't real so we'll never know which makes more sense. We are both likely right and wrong in more ways than we can count 🤷♂️ it's fun to discuss though.
@@thesaviorofsouls5210 I understand that sentiment. In many situations catching zombies unaware is the way to go. I just don't think it is the right way to do comprehensive searches, I'd be more focused on finding ways to move hordes and groups away from my scavenging spots to ensure a thorough check of each building.
But you make the excellent point of dire circumstances, if I'm low on food and starving I probably can't out pace the horde.
I guess my thought process is if the neighbors outside can't hear me when I'm laughing loudly like a maniac on RUclips and doing house repairs, I should be good to bang on the walls once I'm inside to attract anyone or anything within. If there's a horde outside, then you are correct in my eyes not to be so loud, but if we're out where I live when the shit goes down, there's plenty of room between houses and tree lines that if I am going to scavenge, I'mma be kinda picky anyways.
I just love zombies I appreciate y'all's input ^^
The fact he flew to paris to get old tapes from an ex that she could've mailed or something
Just gonna say lol longest I've gone from actually physically talking to another human being as an adult was around 10 days iirc. I was completely fine though, idk maybe I'm just like the most introverted person that ever introverted lol but more likely is the fact that I grew up in a very rural area in Australia and after I got home from school when I was a kid it was like 2 or 3 hours before my mum got home from work so I always had like these big stretches of time where I didn't talk to other people and I just used to mostly go walking through the endless paddocks and forests that surrounded that property so I got very used to and very comfortable with my own company. Very interesting thought to say the least though. Love you stuff btw mate, keep up the epic work!
I imagine sarah and the doctor represent his grief, loneliness, and desperation, granted he is likely clinically insane by this point so I imagine its his last grip on humantiy trying to breakthrough, the part of his brain that still wants a reason to continue and not loose a grip on himself
Roanoke, ALL of your content is amazing and truly a pleasure to behold. Thank you sir!
Fairly sure that "Security office" was like the local Super intendent or something , it's usually like a handyman that lives in the same building , and are trusted by the owner of the building to have spare keys to all the apartments for inspection, repair and other legal reasons.
Great video. I loved the take on it all.
Id love to think I'd be fine 100% on my own, but i drove from Detroit to Boise and it took me 32 hours, and by the end of that third day, I was singing loudly to myself (rare at the time), talking out loud my thoughts as if they were TO someone, and feeling weird altogether.
I spent a long time depressed and isolating myself from friends prior to this, and it was a wake up call to me.
I still sing more than I used to lol. And I'm far from all of my family and my old friends. But I see them once a year, and I've made new friends.
All this to say, isolation is no joke. It sounds pathetic in words to some, maybe, but you don't know til you've felt it.
Mine was self inflicted (and mental health related) but this does a great job connecting the movie to our real world connections to them.
I instantly loved this movie when they made the zombies silent
Roanoke imagine that feeling you had during Thanksgiving break - and now extrapolate that for my entire adult life. It isn't so much lack of socialization but prior mental diagnoses and isolation. But that pit of your stomach feeling I've realized I have even when among people when I get stuck in the normal downward spiral of negative thoughts.
Isolation versus solitude my friend. Thefein lay the true difference.
Finding that can actually be quite dangerous, Al jokes aside. Almost how taking LSD is risky for the same reason.
Love to hear your thoughts. Not trying to be a downer, maybe the human condition is how I feel my "d3fault" mode is but over the years I have found it easier tk get bCk on the path of progression and self improvement.
Be well brother.
He was going crazy from loneliness and he killed the only living things to come his way, twice. Talk about a new level of self-destructive behaviour.
First rule in survival that is always ignored. Close doors behind you so they don't follow you without you noticing.
I loved this movie and I'm so happy you decided to cover it!
French person here. So this office is the "concierge" office. It's your do-everything-man in older French building. They live for free on the property (but the pay is trash). They are responsible for package delivery, arranging for workers to come in the building, and having a copy of your keys in case a worker needs to be let in or you lost your key.
I have to say, what a heart breaking movie. Reminds me of a zombie apocalypse of Cast Away but much more depressing.
The disease could be like the project zomboid virus where some people have immunity to the airborne variant.
Alfred is a hallucination, This is MC's way of dealing with his animalistic side. He felt trapped, caged. Him releasing Alfred is him setting himself free from his own prison. That's why Alfred doesn't attack and you don't see him again.
this is one of my favorite zombie movies of all time i’m so happy you covered it
If you are interested in checking out a manga or a book (as a momentary change of pace from movies and video games), I would love to see you cover Guts from Berserk and try to figure out just what lucky genetic dice have to be rolled for him to do even half the things he does, Pre-Eclipse of course, since there be some magical nonsense after that event.
Alternatively, I also would love to see you take a look at the Blackwing Virus from Star Wars: Death Troopers, the only true horror story in that IP as far as I know.
There are the Starweird, but there's so little on them, they may as well be an in universe cryptid
@@thezambambo2184 Yeah, and they aren't too biology heavy. The Sickness, on the other hand, is right up Roanoke's street.
When it was revealed Sarah was dead the whole time I literally cried. I cannot imagine living in a world like this I'm not mentally capable of such an existence, gosh depression is in many ways the biggest threat to humanity
You've got a point
His subconscious mind is doing what it's supposed to. Trying to keep him alive by any means necessary. The apathy a situation like that can cause would be powerful, overwhelming perhaps, to a lone mind. The sequence where he is hallucinating her is his subconscious fighting with the stubborn and equally great fear he has of leaving. Of finding out what he thinks he knows, but is afraid to confirm.
The thing that pushed him to confront himself in such a way, was probably the unintentional killing of the girl. It was an accident. He couldn't cope. He also knew that staying there longer, he would go mad and starve. This was the last ditch effort of his subconscious, primal mind, to save his life.
Edit: letting go of fear, the past. Embracing hope that he gained from knowing the girl had survived, etc, etc.
that's the basics of what I saw. There is more that could be said, but I hope it addresses your question @20:00.
Thanks for the video. I enjoy your breakdowns and video style.
10:00 the best idea would be to get a box of glasses or christmas ornaments from sombodies apartments, maybe those old people who had a mind blowing experience could lend us some, but then just open the door, toss a few glasses in, and see if anything reacts.
I would love to see an apocalypse film with competent and rational survivors. The only horror film i can recall with genuine smart people and rationale is the thing
Im also extremely introverted, but i love being with friends and family, so even if i were isolated like Sam id be ok for a while but id genuinely struggle
the best kind of horror is the one which even if you do everything right, you will still fail.
@@Angel-eu7pt like in the thing
To be fair Sam is actually pretty damn competent for your average joe. He's very smart when clearing the building at the start with none of the typical "woopsie!"'s the genre is so known for and after clearing the building he begins rationing out his food supplies from day one, The Martian didn't move to it that quickly! Sams fuck ups start around the cat incident and I think it was very purposeful, showing that a genuinely intelligent guy was having a full on mental breakdown from the months of isolation. I mean it's no spoiler to say he's pretty out of it by the end but in this case I think it's totally warranted. Like, think about it, how well would your mental state be if it had been almost a year and you hadn't heard so much as a peep to suggest there was anyone left alive or any aid; military or otherwise coming for your trapped, lonely, starving ass? Most would be losing it well before then and we do see Sam start to make fuckups after the cat.
This is a long way of saying Sam probably IS up there with those in the Thing as being pretty rational. But like all of us super long social deprivation and a complete sense of your fate being hopeless is going to fuck with your brain.
I mean I have agoraphobia and NEVER leave the house except to go to doctors but I think I'd still go a little stir crazy knowing that the world around me was gone after a while.
Edit: And before anyone points out that he went into two apartments Roanoke is sort of cherry picking here. Sam actually does a fair bit of other smart stuff while clearing the building and yes, while he does fuck up that one time the first time he doesn't anymore else, including the second apartment. If you go watch the movie while it probably would be smarter to do as Roanoke said to funnel them with sound Sam still DOES check every corner in that apartment and is much slower about it before he starts looking through what's there.
Competence and rationality quickly go out the window in very high stress situations except from those who are highly trained or other exceptions.
@@1wayroad935 thats what i mean like i wanna see d-day prepper survivors
Its this way in every city but apartment buildings will almost always have keys to every home in the case of a domestic or fire or if a tenant gets mugged or any number of other reasons.
I don’t know anything about French gun laws but if it’s anything like the UK or Sweden, I have no idea how that old man was able to get his hands on a “double barrel force multiplier” when he lives in a flat/apartment in the middle of a city
Hunting on weekends or holidays? Surely people in Europe still go deer/fox hunting?
@danielled8665 Well in the UK you can't actually get permission for owning a firearm if you live in a flat/apartment, usually because of the rules of how to store them (gun safe bolted to concrete, with the ammo kept in a safe in another room, also bolted to concrete), can't be met. Though the UK is actually much more strict than other European nations, so maybe France is more lenient.
@Insert Name legally sure, but old guy moves from his house in the country to an apartment in his old age, you bet he's bringing his boom stick to remember his youth. XD
@@danielled8665 No, at least in the UK as the gun licence is not just tied to a person they are also tied with your address. In the UK if you are taking your firearm off of your property is a crime unless you have submitted the forms that require you to disclose where you are going, why you are taking the firearm, what ammunition you are taking and how much of it you are taking, the times you will be travelling, and the exact route you are taking. If you fail to disclose any of that information or deviate from your stated travelling plans then that’s a crime, the forms with that information have to be submitted to the council and the police, you must have permission from both before you can take your firearm off your property
@@Thorstendeal yes of course, and no one would ever commit a crime, so it's impossible he would have a gun.
Well, I already talk to inanimate objects, so, I think my transition to insanity would be rather smooth. So far, nothing has answered back. I think I'm still in the green.
you know its a good day when Roanoke posts and you get to find out about hypothetical diseases that may or may not be your end
My dad said realistically that zombies should be silent. Because they wouldn't have the strength to push the air up and groan.
the reason the father doesnt drive away 6:36 is because the wife was going to be the one driving. the steering wheel is on the left side in France. so i guess the wife was the driver in the family.
AHHHHH YES, I forget its on the otherside over there, BRO WHY DID HE NOT GO FOR THE DRIVERS SEAT LMAO
honestly i love this movie. its not about some professional survivalist who somehow knows exactly what hes doing, its just some guy making mistakes and actually acting like a human in a stressful environment. it makes the whole thing a lot more believable
So about the keys, they could be spare keys but another realistic option (one that I've experienced firsthand) is that they keys are kept in the building as a *fire safety tool.*
Let me explain; so to make sure everyone gets out of the building in a fire emergency whoever is at the front desk (or security office in this case) will grab all the keys and leave, then log who is out of the building (Since you leave the keys with them when you leave, all the keys they have are for rooms that will have nobody inside.) that way when they do a head count to see who has come out of the building they'll know if a particular room is either a: empty or b: has a passed out potential resident in it.
I kind of like how, as opposed to many other zombie movies, here the weapon actually makes things worse. He shot the cat in anger, he almost shot himself by accident and he killed the only other person he may ever meet.