My Girlfriend is a ZOMBIE flips the script—sometimes the living are scarier than the undead. The guy in the white suit? Terrified but alive. The one with the knife? Broken but dangerous. And that girl in the dress… silent, watching, maybe knowing more than she lets on. Netshort nailed the mood here. Chills.
Fancy mansion, chandeliers, bloodstains on the rug—My Girlfriend is a ZOMBIE doesn't skip on aesthetic contrast. The opulence makes the violence hit harder. That scene where she collapses sobbing by the door? Devastating. You feel every tear. Netshort's visuals really elevate the drama beyond typical zombie fare.
No dialogue needed in My Girlfriend is a ZOMBIE—the eyes say it all. His cold stare, her trembling lips, the older man's grimace… each frame is a monologue of pain. The girl in white barely speaks but her presence looms. Netshort captures micro-expressions like a pro. This isn't horror—it's tragedy with fangs.
Post-apocalypse isn't just about survival—it's about what breaks inside you. My Girlfriend is a ZOMBIE shows that perfectly. Bodies on the floor, relationships shattered, trust gone. That final shot of her curled up alone? Haunting. Netshort doesn't rush the emotion—they let it linger. And I'm still thinking about it.
The tension in My Girlfriend is a ZOMBIE is unreal! That moment when he holds the blade to her throat had me holding my breath. Her tears, his rage—it's messy, raw, and so human. Even with zombies around, it's the emotional chaos that hooks you. Watching on netshort felt like being trapped in that room with them.