Superman/Batman: Apocalypse
The fight choreography was really well done in this latest DCU Animated Original Movie. The DC Showcase shorts on the disc are great too.
The fight choreography was really well done in this latest DCU Animated Original Movie. The DC Showcase shorts on the disc are great too.
One of those rare movies that embraces it’s own campiness. Nobody played a cop better in the 1980s than Tom Atkins.
Really funny punk rock riff on Romero’s zombie series. First appearance of the “running zombie” that I could find.
What’s more metal than zombies? How about some dead rock stars returning from the grave to fight Hitler and his werewolf wife Eva Braun!
Best special effects and probably the weakest film in the Romero series. Budgetary problems are probably to blame for the film’s limited scope.
I Am Legend meets John Hughes. Two rad sisters (Catherine Mary Stewart and Kelli Maroney) try to survive the end of the world. One of my personal favorites.
Crazy zombie apocalypse from Italian director Lucio Fulci. The plot is pretty nonsensical but the ending is very good.
This low-budget horror classic from director Sam Raimi is incredibly ambitious and highly imitated. Introduced the world to Bruce Campbell.
It was nice to see the filmmakers didn’t spend a lot of time on the bigger films but used their time to spotlight some of the smaller ones.
I am very conflicted after seeing this movie. If it is fake, it’s not a very good movie. If it is real, these guys are are kind of jerky.
Lucio Fulci’s quicky rip-off of DOTD is actually a lot of fun. Contains 2 classic scenes : A Splinter In Your Eye and Zombie vs Shark!
Sequel to NOTLD. Turned the gore factor up to 11 while presenting an interesting take on American consumerism. My favorite of the series.
Matt Reeves pulled it off – the remake that holds its own against the original. Every change made sense. The cast was terrific.
A really great movie. I was really impressed by Andrew Garfield, the new Spider-Man. And I don’t think anyone is in David Fincher’s league.
George A. Romero became the godfather of the modern zombie with his groundbreaking directorial debut in 1968. Still studied 40 years later.