darkmoonfirelyte--disqus
darkmoonfirelyte
darkmoonfirelyte--disqus

Well, dude was the O.Z., original zombie. Straight up undead gangsta. I could see that.

For Direct-to-Video flicks, these are hideously expensive to buy. Most of them sound like $5 late-night feature fare, but the production company wants $20 a pop. Bleh. My horror collection will have to wait for these…

Sometimes is about being dead.

Another way to look at zombie fiction is that it represents the emptiness of the human existence. In most versions of zombie lore, humans are, in some way, responsible for the plague that is unleashed (a nuclear strike, a virus, a satellite that comes back with bacteria or something, etc.). We, humanity, create our

Katie, you may be spot on with the movie (probably are, not that it'll stop me from seeing every horror movie ever despite that), but taken on it's own, Lawrence of Alabia is funny.

As a fan of the whole franchise, I can tell you that whatever they say is the plan for how the TV show ties into the movie, ties into the other movie, ties into the crossover between the movies, it will all change a week from now when Sam Raimi gets some other idea and goes in a different direction. The most that can

I just figured the body was on top, Rick fires the AK-47 soon after, most of the horde gets distracted, and Glenn is able to stab the few zombies still feasting on the idiot on top of him. Doesn't take much cheating, and considering that the first three episodes have been dealing, over and over, with how easy it is to

So, wait, Legion isn't a sequel to the movie Legion? Damn it!

I had an idea a long time ago about a prequel Die Hard set 100 years earlier, following his great-grandfather (who could also be played by Willis) trying to stop a train robbery by one of "them Gruber boys" (so, obviously, we could get Alan Rickman back). It was dumb and ridiculous and no one should ever make it

Please, AV Club, make your version happen. I would watch the shit out of this.

There is, until Universal's license for Marvel heroes expires. I think I heard it's up in 2019.

The movie was absolutely terrible in the best possible way. I will say, though, that the series was surprisingly watchable. It was good instead of delightfully bad.

I would argue that it's not a matter of more zombies in general, but that Hollywood fails to do anything new with the zombies productions they've cranked out in the last couple of years. One of the things that the Walking Dead does that is new and interesting is following a single group of survivors over the long haul

I read the book. A mash up of Price and Prejudice and the band The Zombies would have been more entertaining.

A fair point, indeed. Judicial slavery is still part of our culture even now, with prison workers doing all kinds of jobs (such as outdoor farming, construction, and demolition) as well as the production of goods and services, while at the same time being paid next to nothing for that work (drastically less than the

Potentially, which may or may not be a poor assumption on my part, granted. On the flip side, having read the book the Martian, Mindy's casting as an all but albino white girl seems a little off in the flick.

Yeah, I was gonna say, they were totally pro-slavery, But then, just about every culture had slaves during that time (and for many centuries before and after). It was a practice that was just a part of their civilization.

I agree. That stood out for me the first time she showed up on screen. They found basically the whitest girl they could and gave her a role that was pretty obviously written for an Asian (Korean) woman. Weird.

Eh, they're interchangeable. "Capitalism, yay!" and then switch out some names.

Seems more like they rot, though. Even the ones that eat regularly are still slowly decaying, while old zombies seem to be able to "live" for months.