In most zombie movies the undead only go after humans who are alive. Why is that?
This applies also to the 'Infected' like the ones from the movie, '28 Days Later' and 'Dawn of the Dead' which, in my opinion I don't think are technically dead.
What prevents zombies from attacking each other?
Answer
In Marvel Zombies, they did once they'd exhausted their other food supplies.
But they complained the whole time - apparently the dead taste terrible, no matter how well you cook 'em.
In other mythologies, it varies. In 'Return of the Living Dead' they eat braaaaaaaaains...and zombies don't have those (they need the electrical impulses of the living brain to dull the pain of being dead).
In the other 'Dead' movies (Romero's) they seek living flesh. If it isn't warm, they leave it be.
In Monster Island (and the sequels) the dead seek the energy of the living, which (most) take via consumption - the dark energies that fill the dead don't heal (or benefit) other zombies (unless they retained their intellect).
In short, it's a conceit of the genre, and each author gives it his own spin (or doesn't - some just don't address it).
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