I have written aboutThe Walking Deadextensively for Screen Rant, and that is because I feel that there is so much to be said about Robert Kirkman’s comic series – yet I often find myself coming back to one foundational point about the story, which is that it is “about” its human characters, not the zombies, and the very first page of the comic’s debut issue makes that clear.
The Walking Dead#1 – written by Robert Kirkman, with art by Tony Moore – famously begins in media res, with the series' protagonist, police officer Rick Grimes, engaged in a firefight with an escaped convict.

I’ve always appreciated how this single-page moment sets the tone, and establishes the style ofThe Walking Deadcomic, but upon returning to it,I’ve come to realize that it sets up the theme of the whole series, which is that the line between civilization and chaos is razor-thin.
I’ve read the first issue ofThe Walking Deadmultiple times, and up until now, I always took the opening scene at face value, as a shocking, attention-grabbing moment, which also served as a convenient way to put Rick Grimes in a coma, so thatWalking Dead#1 could have its big, dramatic “wake up in the hospital during a zombie apocalypse” moment. However, now it has become clear to me thatthe decision to start the story here is a carefully calibrated creative choice, one that orients the reader toward the overall thematic thrust of the book.

AsThe Walking Deadwent on, Robert Kirkman became increasingly focused on exploring what would happen when the barriers between society and barbarism come crumbling down.
Even before a zombie appears in a single panel ofThe Walking Dead, Rick Grimes’ life is radically changed by violence – human violence. It is a testament to Robert Kirkman’s writing that there is actually a lot to unpack about this plot decision, as well as the details that comprise it, considering that it all occurs in a sequence of eight panels. To be honest, I’m surprised more detailed analysis hasn’t been devoted to the way it inaugurates both thenarrative and thematic trajectories of Kirkman’s story.

That is to say, longtime fans of the comic series will know that asThe Walking Deadwent on, Robert Kirkman became increasingly focused on exploring what would happen when the barriers between society and barbarism come crumbling down, rather than just serving up another spectacle of zombie-horror violence every issue. This is what gave Kirkman’s story its longevity, and I would argue, helped ensure its popularity – and the opening shoot-out scene signifies that this was the author’s intent from the very beginning.
Walking Deadreaders know that the comic is “about” much more than zombies, but for many people, that is still the default way of describing the franchise, as reductive as it might be. As early as 2007,Robert Kirkman articulated the true purpose of his seriesin interviews, which is why it struck me this time that it is so clear, in retrospect, from the start ofThe Walking Dead#1, when Rick’s attempt at preserving order and stability is rewarded with a bullet to the gut.

“The World Is a Dark Place”: The Walking Dead’s Zombie Apocalypse Is Somehow Less Horrifying Than Real Life
The Walking Dead series has often face criticism from critics for being excessively dark. Yet, it’s nowhere near as dark as the real world.
The very first scene highlights the tenuous, strained ties that bind human society together; by the time Rick Grimes wakes up in the hospital on the next page, zombies have gnawed through those ties,but they were really only ever a mechanism to unleash the story’s true monsters.By their nature, zombies are unthinking, and ignorant of the pain they cause – but the same can’t be said ofthe human villains, from the Governor, to Negan, and beyond, who quickly rose up to makeWalking Dead’spost-apocalyptic landscape even worse.

An Important Starting Point For The Series
The Walking Dead, in its original sixteen-year run, was published entirely in black-and-white, a creative choice that was meant, in part, to evoke theorigins of the zombie genre, George Romero’sNight of the Living Dead. It wasn’t until I started to develop my newfound appreciation for the comic’s opening scene that I found a greater resonance to this creative decision as well; Romero invented the modern zombie story, and it is almost as though Kirkman and original series artist Tony Moore omitted color from their series to signify their intention to reinvent the genre.
While zombies never stopped being a danger inThe Walking Dead, they quickly turned into more of a feature of the setting than an antagonistic force.
That is, to make it about more than just zombies, and in the process, make it far more horrifying. In other words, the existence of zombies might be unfathomable, but the depravities of some human survivors were perhaps all too predictable.This is foreshadowed by the first scene ofWalking Dead#1, as are several other key elements of the series ahead, from the prominence of a prison as a location, to the biggest tragedies that Rick Grimes faced during the course of the comic – or rather, would befall his family and friends as he struggled to keep them alive.
It’s True: Walking Dead Really Is “Extremely Tame” Compared to the World’s Most R-Rated Zombie Series
Walking Dead has some intensely gory moments, but its creator insists that one contemporary ‘zombie’ series makes it look tame by comparison.
Meaning, majorly traumatic moments – from the death of Rick’s wife Lori and baby daughter Judith, to his son Carl’s nearly fatal gunshot wound to the eye, to thedeaths of Glenn and countless otherWalking Deadcharacters– were the result of other, malevolent human characters, rather than zombie attacks. While zombies never stopped being a danger inThe Walking Dead, they quickly turned into more of a feature of the setting than an antagonistic force, something that was very much by design, according to Robert Kirkman’s plans for the comic.
A Genre Story With A Philosophical Streak
Each arc ofThe Walking Dead, to some extent or another, contains horrific instances of human-on-human violence, and these are the moments I have learned to focus on as being truly vital to understanding the “point” ofThe Walking Dead. Again, to Robert Kirkman’s credit, the comic was written with more than just entertainment in mind – like all great works of literature, it has an idea about humanity, and society, that it constantly wrestled with, a struggle out of which its best story beats were generated.
The Walking Deadis not “about” zombies; instead it is a treatise offering a warning about the darkest potential of humanity in a post-civilization landscape.
In this way, I’ve come tofindThe Walking Deadparticularly inspiring, on a creative level. As sprawling of an ongoing narrative as it might have become, it was always a finite story – one that was meant to carry on for a long time, but never indefinitely – whichretained a dedicated focus, over nearly two decades of serial storytelling, on using its zombie outbreak premise to explore the capacity and potential for human evil, as well as human good, in the aftermath of an unreal calamity.
In the end, I think it is important to remind people – to shout it from the rooftops, if necessary – thatThe Walking Deadis not “about” zombies; instead it is a treatise offering a warning about the darkest potential of humanity in a post-civilization landscape. Though it is, of course, a thrilling, pulse-pounding read, it is also an intellectually stimulating reading experience, which is what solidifiesThe Walking Deadas one of the greatest comics of all time, in my opinion.