If your looking for something ongoing there's this one:
it's super atmospheric and well paced, and the protagonist is one of my favorites.
If you want to binge something completed, this one is very good:
It's less about the bomb its themselves and more about isolation and learning how to survive in an abandoned world.
Both of these focus on facets of the apocalypse that I think a lot of stories (movies especially) just brush over. Things like living on your own, the old world turning into just a survival environment, technology, and how this kind of thing would realistically be dealt with. They also both do what zombie stories are meant to do, and that's examine how people behave under pressure and the nature of who we are. They're also both fairly optimistic, which is a nice change of pace.
About ZOMBIES (the Disney film) I think there is a lot of great potential for an interesting story there that just gets tossed aside in favor of making a typical Disney film. Things like zombies having their own language, the way we treat exchange students, race, class, and ethics.
There are things I like about the film too, the main couple has some legitimate chemistry, (rare in a movie like this) the coach kills every scene he's in, and I love the art direction. (the costumes just kill me) also I like that the typical "mean girl" character is a boy for a change. however, I think it really should have addressed more of the aforementioned ideas, and I really get uncomfortable in the scene where the white human protagonist tells the only zombie played by a person of color that they're going to do the protest more performatively because what they zombies had in mind wasn't "her style" It kinda reeks of a white savior mindset and the idea that minorities shouldn't make a big fuss when they are being opressed.