Dead Eyes Open

Dr. John Requin is sick.

For one thing, he can't sleep -- he doesn't have insomnia, he literally cannot sleep. He requires a special diet of high-protein foods (currently, he's subsisting mostly on tofu). He's lost his sense of smell. That's almost a good thing, though, because he's starting to smell himself -- and unless he keeps the thermostat in his office turned down as low as it can go, the smell gets worse. He would bathe, but he's afraid that if he does, the water will only make the problem worse. His skin is peeling and falling off and doing worse things than that, forcing him to keep the lights down when he's at the office. Naturally, since he's a therapist, all of this is having a profoundly negative effect on his ability to do his job. His wife is very loving and supportive about all of this, but his young daughter is becoming increasingly withdrawn and confrontational, unable to cope with the changes her father is going through. It's enough to make someone want to die -- except that, technically, John Requin already has.

At first, John wonders if he's the only one in the world with his condition. Then he sees an article in the tabloids about outbreaks of "the living dead" in cities around the world, and feels a glimmer of hope -- hope that quickly turns to horror when he reads further, and learns of the measures the government is preparing to take against these "mockeries of life."

So begins Dead Eyes Open, a comic by Matt Shepherd and Roy Boney, Jr. that takes the typical Zombie Apocalypse story and turns it on its head. The comic was published from 2005 to 2006 by SLG Publishing, and re-released in 2007 as a graphic novel. Starting July 5, 2009, the creators began posting the comic page-by-page on a blog; the last page went up on January 22, 2010. You can read it from the beginning here.


 * Big Bad:
 * Boom! Headshot!: The preferred way of dealing with rogue Returners (the other alternative being massive body trauma, like giant holes blown through the chest), and thus unapologetically abused in the fight scenes.
 * Deader Than Dead: Returners are already clinically dead, but massive trauma to the chest or head can kill them again.
 * The Chessmaster:
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: A socially-disenfranchised minority fights for rights and acceptance in a world that fears and hates them. Am I talking about blacks, Jews, gays, or Returners? (And yes, references to all three of the preceding examples are used to characterize the Returner plight, and repeatedly lampshaded -- Requin specifically protests the government's Returner internment camps, pointing out that he's Jewish.)
 * The Dragon: Taylor.
 * Eyepatch of Power: Taylor.
 * Eye Scream: A few, including one Returner junkie getting shot in the eyeballs with tranquilizer darts (since, as Returner hearts obviously don't pump, it's the only way to get the drugs to the brain), several getting shot in the eyes with bullets, and of course.
 * Fate Worse Than Death:
 * Fridge Logic: Gleefully pointed out by the author, who admits in his running commentary that most such moments stem from not writing the whole plot out in advance.
 * Interservice Rivalry: John, Blakeney, and Ellard are all working towards improving the Returners' quality-of-unlife, but they don't communicate between each other very much, and the tensions and rivalry between John and Blakeney stop them from being as effective as they could be.
 * Kids Are Cruel: Yes, John's daughter is justifiably traumatized by her father becoming an undead abomination. She's still a jerk. The child aptly dubbed Mean Fat Kid by the author is another example.
 * Mad Eye: A number of Returners have one eye that's permanently wide-open. The author calls it a "crazy eye".
 * Mismatched Eyes: One of John's eyes is cloudy.
 * Not Using the Z Word: The "polite" term for the undead is "Returners," while the impolite version is "Deadies." Word of God states that the word "zombie" actually doesn't exist in this universe, but someone spread a rumor during the initial revival wave that they ate human brains, and references to old Romero films are still in.
 * One Celebrity Was Brutally Killed And Came Back As A Returner: Oprah Winfrey and Wil Wheaton are both characters in Dead Eyes Open.
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning: On the covers, the only element of the series that's in colour, the Returners are depicted with red irises.
 * Right Man in The Wrong Place: John becomes the government spokesperson for the Returners (leading directly to him ) chiefly by virtue of being a respectable academic and lucky enough to survive an attack from a government kill-team.
 * Scary Undead Black Man: Harvey.
 * The Cobbler's Children Have No Shoes: John's a family therapist, but he's got a terrible relationship with his daughter after his death.
 * They Would Cut Me Up: When John's daughter threatens to tell about him, he responds with this argument (and adds that they'd probably take her mother away as well, in order to twist the knife further). Yeah, John's a pretty bad parent.
 * Major Callahaghn says They Would Cut You Up to John, too... well, more like "blast you in the face."
 * Took a Level In Badass: John does, eventually, by.
 * Unwitting Pawn:
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: Major Callahaghn and Taylor (though Taylor's only pretending at the "well-intentioned" part -- he just wants to get infamous by emulating Callahaghn's goals and riding off his fame).
 * What Measure Is a Non-Human?: One of the central tensions of the series. Texas is trying to secede just because dead people were given rights.
 * Who Wants to Live Forever?:
 * Zombie Apocalypse: One of the few out there where the zombies are the ones being hunted.
 * Zombie Apocalypse: One of the few out there where the zombies are the ones being hunted.
 * Zombie Apocalypse: One of the few out there where the zombies are the ones being hunted.