Today’s movie is not a movie, but rather a two-season miniseries that aired on the BBC from 2013-2014. In the Flesh consists of nine total episodes (three in season one, six in season two), and aired during the Silver Age of Zombie Films (during the great revival of the genre, when it seemed that zombie films, like their subject matter, were inescapable).
In the Flesh introduces a bit of a twist to the traditional zombie formula: it takes place after a zombie uprising, known as “The Rising,” took place, and a treatment—not a cure—for zombification has been found. With a daily dose of medicine, former zombies (called “the Risen” or, derogatorily, “rotters”) can live as humans. That said, they are not human—they cannot eat or drink food without getting violently ill, for example—and can revert to their “rabid” state if they miss a dose—or if they take an illicit street drug called “Blue Oblivion” that, for some reason, a quasi-terrorist organization called the “Undead Liberation Army” (ULA) distributes to its fanatical members.


