'Kingdom', undead to the Korean | TV
Kingdom could be sold as a series of zombies, but better not to do it if what you are looking for is something along the lines of The Walking Dead. It has undead, yes, but the series plays with other rules that make it attractive in a world saturated with monsters that are reborn after death (Game of Thrones included). This Korean series, created by the veteran Kim Eun-hee (writer also of Signal) and based on a comic, proposes a plot halfway between history (it is set in the Middle Ages), palace intrigues and the terror of the unknown.
Let no one expect scares and shreds everywhere, there is something, but the way of making Korean fictions, with another rhythm and other priorities, but still traditional. There is harshness, but also some humor (some gestures of some secondary, to Western eyes, seem too histrionic). In the end, the zombies represent a plague, which could well have been plague, but with zombies is more fun. And yes, in the end, humans are more dangerous with their decisions and intentions than the living dead (in this case, very fast).
Kingdom It is enjoyable, it is not long, there are six episodes with an open ending that tries to impact and that changes the rules of the proposed monsters again. It could be a very good series, with an impeccable production, but it has an impediment: the characters do not end up being well constructed or exploited. True, they are only half a dozen chapters, but with a view to a second installment, more emphasis could have been placed on explaining these characters better. As the doctor played by Doona Bae (known by Sense8), character that shows a potential that does not end up exploding.
If the second season improves this and continues to show the monsters like in the second part of the first season, Netflix has a series of zombies for long.