
Pique and Mbanga are locked in the abandoned exit, reinforced by the horde of zombies, trying to get inside. One of the clingons hunted by the pair is crowded from zombies, crumbled and swallowed. (I can't imagine the clingons think that honest way to go.)
Ever since George Romero's "Night of the Living Dead" has turned the zombies into films, their portraits on the screen. Kenfori-zombies are a fast-paced, not dense dupluses. Tying their origin with the plants, it also feels withdrawn from "the last of us". In that video game/TV series, zombies are not actually unprepared. Instead, the story suggests what would happen if The true fungus of cordyceps has evolved from possession of ants to possession of human beings. The set of abandoned surveillance of cephanic, filled with plant growths containing semi-dried human remains, resembles "the last of us" and Alex Garland's scientific film "Destruction".
The existence of Star Trek's future films is disputed. By the 24th century, the cinema seems to have lost any cultural relevance in favor of interactive storytelling of Holodek.
Given the closeness of Pique and Mbanga to the "word z-word", it should be assumed that zombie films (or at least books) still exist in the 23rd century. "Star Trek: Enterprise" has shown that, at the very least, people are still watching the Jameses Keith's "Frankenstein" films in the 22th century. Do they still see the pictures of George Romero on the 23rd?
Wherever they learned Pique and Mbanga about zombies, it was not from their "real" world. Yes, somehow, "Star Trek" has never done appropriate, undead zombies. The franchise has made vampires, witches ("Catspaw"), and even devils ("Devil's detul"), but not zombies. The closest thing to the zombies in Star Trek before the "Shuttle to Cefri" was in the "Enterprise" "impulse" episode. In that episode, the Enterprise NX-01 crew encountered a destroyed Volcano ship, Singa. The ship has discovered a mineral, trelium-D, which is toxic to the volcanoes, making them less intelligent and violent. When the company came to Seleia, the crew was degenerated into an incessant horde.
As a "shuttle to ceforic" it seems that under the influence of "the last of us", "Impulse" (which was broadcast in 2003). Then-the "28 days later" present with its fast zombies that are not actually zombies, only people infected with a "rage virus". "Star Trek" has and will always be set in the future, but links its audience with the future by drawing their present. You can follow what films that series "Star Trek" choose respect.
"Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" is moving to Paramount+, with new episodes of the current third season premiered on Thursday.
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