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    <title>film criticism on Yellow Fiction</title>
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      <title>Death Wish Men: The Obsession Driving Taylor Sheridan’s Heroes</title>
      <link>https://yellowfiction.com/2026/04/04/taylor_sheridan_death_wish_heroes/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>Spend enough time inside the worlds built by Taylor Sheridan and a pattern starts to press in from the edges—at first it feels like grit, then like fatalism, and eventually like something closer to ritual. His protagonists don’t just risk death; they orbit it. They lean into it. They behave as if survival is incidental, almost inconvenient, compared to the clarity that comes from stepping right up to the edge. It’s not quite a death wish in the melodramatic sense.</description>
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      <title>The Allure of the Zombie: Why the Dead Keep Coming Back</title>
      <link>https://yellowfiction.com/2026/04/04/zombie-genre-allure/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
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      <description>The zombie should not work as a monster. It is slow. It is stupid. It cannot plan, negotiate, or adapt. It has no menace beyond mass and hunger, no psychology to speak of, no capacity for the cruelty that makes a truly frightening antagonist. And yet the zombie film has outlasted nearly every other horror subgenre, mutated across decades of cinema, and shown a cultural staying power that more sophisticated monsters — vampires, werewolves, the various children of Frankenstein — have largely failed to match.</description>
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