I started watching Kingdom on Netflix. It's good so far. It's a Korean period piece centered around a conspiracy involving the undead. There's more conspiracy than zombie right now.
The most striking thing is the power of representation. I've heard much about it, and it made sense. But it really rings through here. It's simply really nice to see Korean people — people that look like people you know or are related to — doing regular things (or at least things that are regular in a movie with zombies in it) and having regular feelings in a movie. (This differs greatly from, say, kung fu movies, which I enjoy, but have almost no character depth, and K-dramas, which people typically watch because they're exotic.)
You don't have to worry about one character portraying some kind of shitty stereotype. There's plenty of characters that occupy all sorts of human roles — ne'er do wells, conformists, the bold, the meek. You can just relax. It's a shockingly strong feeling.
Obviously, this is part of why Black people especially enjoyed Black Panther, and I hope I see more of it.