1. The social message of the movie Zombieland is the benefits of society sticking together in times of crisis. When the mad cow disease breaks and infects the people, they seek to keep themselves safe from the zombies through individual efforts. However, this strategy does not work (Jones, Philippon & Venkateswaran, 2020). When Columbus and Tallahassee go out to find the family and met the two girls, Wichita and Little Rock, the girls kidnap them but later they became friends. Therefore, it is only by coming together that the group manages to survive the zombies. Columbus, which has a personal rule of survival, has to break them in the end to save others. In a nutshell, the social message of the movie entails sticking together to survive.
2. Wellness in the movie is demonstrated by the group that is not infected yet they still have psychological problems. On one hand, there is a large part of the country and people that are infected by the mad person virus. They are dying and in bad health. On the other hand, the ones who are not infected are not healthy too (Braun & Rodgers, 2018). Tallahassee is looking for his puppy, Buck, that is later discovered to be his son who died of the mad person disease. Colombus' parents could also have died in the zombie attacks. In this regard, it is not enough not to be sick as well as being physically, mentally, and psychologically fit.
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3. Socially, the movie provides the meaning of social relationships even in the face of human suffering. The four friends come together to face a situation that could annihilate the whole of mankind and they only manage to triumph by working together (Jones, Philippon & Venkateswaran, 2020). Therefore, the movie emphasizes the need for social interaction; indeed, it is through the interaction that the characters open up and manage to stay alive through the zombie attack.
References
Braun, B., & Rodgers, M. (2018). Health and wellness: Leading cooperative extension from concept to action. Journal of Human Sciences and Extension, 6 (2).
Jones, C. J., Philippon, T., & Venkateswaran, V. (2020). Optimal mitigation policies in a pandemic: Social distancing and working from home (No. w26984). National Bureau of Economic Research.