Blank Check with Griffin & David - 28 Days Later with David Rees
Episode Date: February 26, 2023Fast zombies, a deserted London, and potato-quality digital cinematography - 28 DAYS LATER proved to be a genre-defining hit for Danny Boyle after the disappointment of THE BEACH. Humorist and Blankie... favorite David Rees returns to the podcast to take us back to the immediate post-9/11 period, a mood and time which this film conjures instantly. Join us for a deep dive into the zombie canon, a tangent on the famed “Young British Artists” of the 1990s, a primer on Canadian anti-capitalist band Godspeed You! Black Emperor, and a moment of disbelief when Rees discovers that Brendan Gleeson played Donald Trump in Showtime’s THE COMEY RULE. Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Since it began, who have you podcasted?
You wouldn't be alive now if you hadn't podcasted somebody.
I'm really struggling with the accents this series.
That's fine. No, that was good. That was fine.
That was good. What's the word being substituted there?
Killed.
Killed.
Killed. Murdered.
Yeah, yeah.
Very similar. Almost the same word. Killed and podcasted.
Right.
The two worst things you can do to somebody., killed and podcasted. Right.
The two worst things you can do to somebody, murder them or podcast them.
I think that's the Sixth Amendment.
Yeah.
Thou shalt not podcast.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
Sixth Amendment.
Sixth Commandment.
Jesus Christ. I answered the right thing with you saying the wrong thing.
And then I thought I had done the wrong thing because you had said the wrong thing.
Oh my God, that was me.
That was all me.
Killer start.
Killer, killer start.
Hello.
Hello, hello.
Hi.
Hi.
This is Blank Check with Griffin and David.
I'm Griffin.
I'm David.
It's a podcast about filmographies,
directors who have massive success early on in their careers
and then are given a series of blank checks
to make whatever crazy passion projects they want.
And sometimes those checks clear and sometimes they bounce, baby.
Sometimes they get infected.
Sometimes the checks get infected.
With rage.
Yes.
Sometimes the checks are enraged.
Yes.
The ultimate virus.
This is a miniseries on the films of Danny Boyle.
Oh, Danny Boyle, the pipes, the pipes are calling.
It is called Transpod spot casting that's right today we're talking about his comeback film yeah without
a doubt the distinct beginning of his second phase as a filmmaker uh it's called 28 Days Later. Dot, dot, dot. Yeah, although...
It's not referred to... There's no dot, dot, dot on the IMDb.
But it is on screen.
If you're going by the Mike D'Angelo rules of
whatever the title is on screen, that is the title.
Well, I think this is an important thing to ask because
is this the second dot, dot, dot movie we've covered or not i don't know uh our
guest should weigh in i think i'm not sure how you feel about the ellipsis in a title do you think
the title is what's on the poster or what is on screen what's on the poster yeah i i'm with you
like because no offense to mike d'angelo But he'll do that thing where he like
He won't call the Irishman the Irishman
He calls it like, I heard you paint houses
Because the title of the Irishman
Never appears on screen
And sometimes I'm sort of like, look
Don't be a stickler, it's okay
Your classic
Ghostbusters answer the call
A title that only appears
On screen, or Shane Black's Iron Man 3 T-H-R-E-E Ghostbusters Answer the Call. A title that only appears on screen.
Or Shane Black's Iron Man 3.
T-H-R-E-E.
Spelled out, right.
Right.
David is taking off his sweatshirt to show off his t-shirt.
David, what's on your t-shirt there?
This is from 2016, right?
This is the original, right?
A much better time.
Well, it was actually A much better time.
Well, it was actually a pretty stressful time.
Ghostbusters Answer the Call was in theaters.
Everyone was chill about it.
And this is from our guest's podcast, Election Profitmakers,
which in 2016 was sort of a limited podcast. If you remember, I mean, you know.
I do remember.
This was kind of our reward at the end of it
you know we had unfortunately gotten donald trump but we did get a cool t-shirt about wave riding
that's right um yeah anyway that's what i'm wearing today it's it's it's warm it's toasty
pretty pretty nice in new york today so i don't i don't need a sweater well that's a bit of a
humble brag uh david reese uh thank you for coming back to the show.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
It's nice to be back.
Your third appearance.
It's nice to have you.
First two appearances, AI Spirited Away.
Two of our favorite movies ever covered on the show.
That's good.
Yeah, they were both really good movies, really interesting movies.
And I feel like for many people, too, of their favorite episodes,
I hear them cited so often. You were very selective. Every time we've asked you to do the show, you basically throw out a movie and say, if you ever cover this, I'll do it.
Really? It makes me sound like such a such an asshole. Sorry.
You're not an asshole. You're you're you're you're special.
I'm just my fear is that if it's not a movie
that I don't have some kind of investment
and I just won't have anything to say about it.
You don't feel strongly about Clifford?
Clifford the Big Red Dog?
What?
No, no.
Whoa, it's the one that Tom Sharpling is obsessed with
where a boy is a man or someone.
I've never seen it.
I don't know it.
Okay, Ben Hosley also obsessed with it.
Okay, yeah.
That's pretty fucked up.
You need to watch.
Is it that a grown man is a boy
or that a grown man thinks he's a boy?
I mean, is a boy being...
Yeah, a boy is being played by a man,
but there's no acknowledgement of it.
It's purely a theatrical conceit.
Within the text of the film itself,
he is a normal boy, except
is he all that normal?
In some ways, you could say he's possessed.
Or he's like a zombie,
if you will,
to
dinosaur land.
But it's not like Big,
where the plot of Big is
there's a boy running wild in this man's body.
No, there's nothing in the plot that explains why he is played by a man in his 40s.
Oh, that is kind of wild.
It's a strange, I think you would find it unsettling.
I'm not sure, I don't know where you fall on Martin Short generally.
I don't know.
I haven't seen him in that many things actually.
I liked what I saw of Only Murders in the Building, but I don't know if I've ever seen him in a movie. It's kind of
like freebasing Martin Short. It's the most unconstrained he is. Pure Martin Short. And
that's good in a way. You're like, wow, this guy is totally doing what he wants to do. But in another
way, you're like, well, maybe sometimes people need guardrails and those
things are okay.
Is he the one who would put his hair up in a huge point and then squirm around in an
armchair?
I think you're combining two things.
Martin Short characters.
Primetime Glick squirms around in an armchair and then Ed Grimley.
Yeah, I'm thinking of Ed Grimley.
Is that Martin Short?
Yes.
And didn't he have a hair point, like a unicorn point?
No, no, that was the hair point.
Yes.
And tucked in shirt, high-waisted pants.
The squirming around in the armchair, I feel that's more Jiminy Glick.
That's a bit of a Glick.
He's, you know, how do you describe him?
Marant, imbecile, you know, celebrity interviewer character.
Got it.
Okay.
But no, the thing is, we have some guests who are like yeah
you're doing some reheated trash from the 90s like i'd love to swing in and chat about it and
then you i feel like you you get energized by less pop culture but when you are energized it's
it's very profound and so that's that's when we like to you know to talk to you that's the thing we we like
when there is a a convergence uh and this was a rare example where there were like two things you
were interested in doing back to back we won't say what the other one is because it's a future
miniseries not announced oh okay yeah but we you came back and sort of said, like, this is actually one of the films I have the strongest opinions on.
The film we're talking about today, 28 Days Later.
Yeah, it has a very unique and I think almost unrepeatable place in my life as a movie watcher.
as a movie watcher in that I don't think I've ever seen another movie
at the time of its release
that clicked with me more.
Wow.
And for reasons we can get into.
Very interesting to me.
David was poking you on this
right before we started recording,
but you were saying that zombie movie
is perhaps your favorite genre in theory, but also the genre with the widest convergence of movies you love versus movies you hate.
or a type of work or a type of food or whatever,
that means that you're only that much more particular about the examples that cross your palate, so to speak.
And I think for years,
I've always really responded to zombie movies
for a number of reasons,
some of which are like,
I think they kind of confirm my political sensibility
and my nihilistic prejudices.
I also have had over the course of my life a recurring nightmare about zombies,
and so I think there must be something on a deep, deep psychological level about zombies
that is uncanny and yet fulfilling and comforting.
Do you know what your first zombie movie was?
Like, what was your entree to the genre?
Well, we'll have to draw a distinction between zombie movies and post-apocalyptic movies
Because there's a lot of overlap in both of them
But I have a feeling that the first
So in preparation for this episode
Because I was so stoked to talk about zombies
I re-watched a lot of zombie movies
I think I watched nine zombie movies in the past
Nine!
Wow One a night One a night of zombie movies. I think I watched nine zombie movies in the past. Nine? Wow.
One a night.
One a night.
I want the list.
I want the lineup.
Yeah.
I wrote them down in chronological order for the benefit of your listeners.
Here we go.
Night of the Living Dead, 1968.
Classic.
I'm going to pause only to say that I was stunned to realize this, but I still think that is the best zombie
movie ever made. Wow. It's so uncanny and it is so close to the recurring nightmares that I
have had over the course of my life about people just standing outside my house.
We're going to dig more into this nightmare, by the way. Yeah, yeah, okay. Yeah. But it feels incredibly real
in a way
that a lot of them can't
because a lot of them
are borrowing from
that movie
to this day.
It's one of those
lightning in a bottle movies, too,
where it's,
there are just,
like, accidents
that lend it
this weird alchemy
that makes it
bigger than it
ever could be intentionally.
As much as it's a film made by incredibly intelligent, skilled people.
No, totally, totally.
And the final, you know, the sequence of photographs at the end of it with the meat hooks is still absolutely dread-inducing and just, like, totally masterful.
So I started with that one.
I started back at the Wellspring, Night of the Living Dead.
Then I watched George Romero's movie from 1973 called The Crazies.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is a close analog to 28 Days Later, which I think I had seen maybe in middle school.
You know, a lot of these movies made the slumber party circuit
back in my youth on VHS cassette
or on HBO or whatever, Cinemax.
And I will say that
Revisiting the Crazies,
that movie is a damn masterpiece.
That movie is so much better
than the next movie I watched
from 1978,
which is widely considered
the best zombie movie ever made,
which is Romero's Dawn of the Dead.
Certainly a classic. Which is definitely a classic best zombie movie ever made, which is Romero's Dawn of the Dead. Certainly a classic.
Which is definitely a classic,
and you can see so much of the source code
of contemporary zombie iconography,
at least up until movies like 28 Days Later
when all that stuff got subverted and ramped up.
But I would say Dawn of the Dead has not aged well.
That is like a blinding hot take. Not that I'm disagreeing. I have not seen Dawn of the Dead in a aged well. That is like a blinding hot take.
Not that I'm disagreeing.
I have not seen Dawn of the Dead in a long time,
but I do love it.
I do also love The Crazies.
The Crazies is good.
I saw Dawn of the Dead again recently.
I saw it right around last Halloween.
Do you know the weird saga of the 3D remaster of this movie?
The original one from the 70s, they turned it into 3D.
Yeah, I'm going to give the shortest version of this story.
But like, you know, the Romero franchise is famous for the rights all being fucked up
and Romero never retaining any of them.
And they're all being split between different weird money people.
Night of the Living Dead going to public domain because he forgot to copyright
the new title versus the old title, whatever. One of these guys who threw some changing of
hands ended up with the rights to the original Dawn of the Dead, but only Dawn in like 2012
when there were the 3D re-releases of like Titanic and Lion King and Jurassic Park and
they were doing okay, was like, great, that's what I'll do.
That's how I'll make my money.
I'll convert this to 3D
and spent like $6 million converting it to 3D.
And by the time it was done,
the 3D fad had just like completely collapsed.
Oh my God.
And for the last 10 years,
you can't really easily rent Dawn of the Dead.
It's not in print
in any home media.
There are like very few legal ways,
if any,
to watch it in the United States
because this guy controls the rights
and he's basically like,
I'm not going to let anyone see this
until I can make back my money
on the 3D re-release.
I just found it on YouTube.
Someone had posted it on YouTube.
It's on YouTube, yes.
And I just watched it on YouTube.
Not streaming on any official service right now, but yeah.
Yes, you cannot watch it legally.
But he finally got some two-night-only release nationwide of the 3D thing with very little advertising.
Last Halloween, I went to see it.
I will say, the 3D work on it was good.
He clearly paid a lot of money on it.
But seeing that movie in a theater again, it was better than I remembered it being.
Oh, interesting.
Maybe I'm wrong.
I don't know.
You're not wrong.
It's just your opinion.
Yeah, that's true.
It's just my opinion.
All right.
The next one I watched was, and I have such a hazy memory of watching this at a slumber party that, David, this might be my first exposure to zombie movies.
And this one, I feel like, has aged very well and is a lot of fun.
And that is Return of the Living Dead.
When the punk rockers go into the cemetery and make out and take off their shirts and then they get, you know, hornswoggled by these zombies.
Yeah, crazy Dan O'Bannon movie
with great, you know, practical effects and all that.
It's a lot of fun.
And another child of the weird right splits
of the Romero movies.
Right, this guy had the rights to Of the Living Dead.
He retained the rights to that title formulation.
Right, so it's like an alternate sequel, essentially, to the
first Romero movie.
And this was the movie, apparently, that established
the trope that zombies are interested in
eating brains. Because there's
one slimy black zombie that's a great
costume. Tarman? Are we talking Tarman?
Yeah, Tarman. Yeah. I wasn't sure
if you would know him by his name, but his name is Tarman.
I'm very familiar with his work, yes.
And he just says brains.
Before then, they just would eat your flesh.
Just any part of your flesh.
Right.
This guy goes for brains, right.
Which is also fatty, not a lot of protein.
Right.
Brains.
Yeah, exactly.
Then I watched a movie that came out 17 years later,
which is 28 Days Later.
Sure.
And you know what?
I might have actually is 28 Days Later. Sure. And you know what? I might have actually watched
28 Days Later.
I think watching it again
for this podcast
might have pushed it over
the line,
and this might now be the movie
I have watched more than
any other movie.
Wow.
I think I have seen this movie
six times. Wow. And I think that's a new personal record for
me so i've really watched this movie a lot yeah uh so i watched 28 days later and then i watched
a spanish language zombie movie that i'd never seen but i'd always been on my radar called wreck
or rec record that movie is terrific that movie i agree was terrific I was hooting and hollering It was remade in America
As Quarantine
Which is okay
But Wreck is really fun
Yeah, I enjoyed it
Then I watched the Brad Pitt vehicle
World War Z
Maybe for the third time
Which I think the thing that recommends
World War Z is just some colossal Set pieces that only a big budget zombie movie can do.
I've always sort of avoided that movie.
Have you never seen it?
No.
And that's kind of a good argument.
I was kind of against the idea of a zombie movie being that huge.
But I hear what you're saying of like, except this is the one time a zombie movie could depict some of these things.
This is the PG-13, you know, $150 million zombie movie.
It's the exception to that sort of formula.
That, in my opinion, is sort of half a good movie.
Like there's a lot of, there is, there are some good set pieces in it.
I remember it being a little all over the place.
It sort of jumps around.
Oh, well, he travels around the world. It's just him going from one location to the plot is like we have to go find this scientist in burma and they show up in burma and they're like that
scientist died two days ago the only scientist left is israel well i guess we have to find a
plane and go to israel like he winds up in um wales or something or winds up in either scotland
or what you know it is waves you're. Yeah, Peter Capaldi is there.
Yeah, he's one of the scientists at the lab.
Yeah.
But it's got some stuff.
It's got some good moments.
And it has, I think, the most.
So 28 Days Later, its great innovation was fast zombies, right?
Zombies just booking.
And then I think World War Z's innovation was zombie piles or moving mountains
of zombies right they just sort of like swarm and yeah it's like it's very ant-like it's very
insect-like right right and it's it's it's fine it's whatever um then i watched i think for the
second or third time train to busan which feels like the most recent widely recognized classic of the genre yeah which is
which is good that zombies on a train of course and then i watched a movie that i had never heard
of until i decided to do this zombie research in anticipation of this episode this is a zombie
movie with a great premise but unfortunately an execution that i didn't like and it's a canadian zombie movie
called blood quantum have you ever heard of this movie no no it was 2019 yeah it was at tiff a few
years ago and it was one of those tiff sort of midnight movies that a few people were like yeah
you know there's something to that one and then it became kind of like a shutter hit. Right, yeah.
I've never seen it.
It's set in the 80s, right?
It's got this kind of like vintage feel.
It's set in 1981 in Canada on the,
I think it's called the Red Creek Reservation.
And the premise is that there's a zombie outbreak
and all the First Nations peoples are immune to it.
But all the white Canadians can fall immune to it but all the white canadians are are can fall victim
to becoming zombies so they obviously are all desperate to get into the compound that the
tribe has built it's kind of a cool premise yeah yeah it's a good it's a good like inversion of
history 101 and it's a funny premise there's a lot of obviously like satirical possibilities
there and really interesting you know psychological and political stuff to deal with but there's something
about the way it's shot it felt slack or diffuse in a way that i think is the exact opposite of
what i want and out of my zombie movies i will say this in your list that you've just provided
there's this big jump between Return of the Living Dead,
which is like 85, and 28 Days Later,
which is 2002, 2003, depending on what country you lived in.
So I was sort of like, is there really nothing in between?
And obviously there were zombie movies in between,
but it is true that there really wasn't like
a sort of definitive hit zombie movie in that long period went out of fashion i think
you have to give this movie credit as the revival point because shawn of the dead obviously which is
sort of this big romero homage that's a couple years later right and that's more of like a
classic zombie the zombies are stumbling around or whatever. This movie felt like a really shocking update.
And the fast zombie thing felt
it was new.
It was Injection of Lifeblood. The Dawn of the
Dead remake uses that. Then you get
Romero making zombie movies again
that obviously leads to the Walking Dead comic
and then the show. Like this is
World War Z. This is the
revival
point, really.
David, do you like
this sort of later
Romero trilogy?
His weird
land diary.
Like Land of the Dead
and videotapes
of the dead
or whatever.
Yeah.
Vlog of the dead.
Land of the Dead
I only watched once
and I was kind of
intrigued to revisit it
because that's the one
where like everyone
is just living with
zombies, right? And all the rich people are up at the top of a tower and it's that's the one where like everyone is just living with zombies, right?
And all the rich people are up at the top of a tower
and it's like Edward Hopper and Gianluca Zamo and...
Dennis Hopper.
It would be interesting if it was Edward.
Yeah, that'd be good.
The great painter, American real estate painter Edward Hopper.
I mean, he'd have a lot of material.
Zombie Edward Hopper has come back
to update all his iconic paintings.
Land I owe a rewatch.
I only saw it when it came out in theater well i
remember the hype when it came out was so profound and then people were like huh like it's sort of
heavy on the socio-political stuff and light on the horror yeah like light light but like you know
it's not it's not this sort of whatever people wanted super intense it's kind of like that star
wars movie where they just sit in the Senate
and argue about the Iraq war.
Yes, exactly.
Revenge of the Sith.
You know the one I'm talking about
where there's just like a lot of council meetings and...
Oh, yes.
Cornel West is in it, I think.
Was Cornel West in a Star Wars movie
and a Matrix movie?
No, Cornel West is in the Matrix sequels, yes.
But wasn't he also in one of the Star Wars movies?
I don't think so. I would put it past him, but I don't thinkels. Yes. But wasn't he also in one of the Star Wars movies? I don't,
I do not think so.
I would put it past him,
but I don't think so.
Yeah.
But he's definitely
a government minister
in the Matrix movies, right?
He is on the like
Council of Elders
in the Matrix sequels.
He has a big harmonica
around his neck
and he's one of the various people
being like,
but Morpheus,
can you really chart a path
through the, you know,
like there are a lot of chat.
How long is this going to take?
Two more movies?
Oh my God.
Those Matrix movies.
But you talk about the gap, Sims, like what happens in between Return of the Living Dead,
which feels like the newest, the last new contribution of zombie ideas until 28 Days
Later, right?
In sort of a seismic way the zombie
movies that exist in between those two points are return of the living dead sequels night of the
living dead remake yeah you know like it's a lot of staying in the zone of what has already been
established and and a day of the dead like it's like everyone's sort of keeping the course of what has already been laid out.
And then a lot of, you know, obviously, like, lower tier.
That's the thing.
I think it becomes a really reliable
straight-to-video kind of thing.
It becomes like a C genre
instead of even a B genre anymore.
And the B genre examples are sequels and remakes
of what has already been done.
Although I will say it is funny that the list of zombie movies list that I'm looking on does include Weekend at Bernie's 2.
I mean, that's not Weekend at Bernie's.
Well, no, because David in the first Weekend at Bernie's, Bernie is dead and they puppeteer the body.
In the second Weekend at Bernie's, his dead body is possessed
and walks on its own.
What?
He got voodooed.
You guys have never seen it?
No, I have not.
I have not seen
Weekend at Bernie's 2.
The first Weekend at Bernie's is
our boss died,
we have to pretend.
Right, we gotta pretend he's alive.
Keep up appearances.
Right, right, right, right.
And it's like,
how do you do that for a second movie?
Hey, how you doing?
Right?
Exactly.
You got it, David.
They're marionetting it.
Yes.
The second movie is Bernie gets voodooed and he is physically as a dead body walking like
a zombie towards a point where there is buried treasure and they have to chase this dead
body to find where the buried treasure is.
Whoa.
Now you might be wondering, does he
hook up with somebody, Bernie?
He does.
You don't have that in zombie movies.
No. Not
usually, no. That is rare.
I'm surprised that Weekend at Bernie's
2 hasn't been a Ben's choice.
Yeah. I mean, I guess
there's the
Lucio Fulci movie, Zombie 2
Have you ever seen that one?
Never seen, no
That one's sort of a Euro zombie classic
Zombie Holocaust
That's from like the 70s too
Yeah, Zombie Holocaust
It is a funny genre
So why does it speak to you, David?
Why, you know, why does the
Well, you know, again, in doing my prayerful consideration of zombies in anticipation of this episode, I'll start by saying this.
I am worried now that zombie movies are inherently reactionary.
And I don't consider myself a reactionary, but there's, I think, one of the pleasures of zombie movies.
but there's i think one of the pleasures of zombie movies and it's and and you see it most overtly in the zack snyder remake of dawn of the dead is the zombie movie creates the permission
structure where you can take a gun and just shoot people all day long and you don't have to you
don't have to have a guilty conscience because they are actually not people anymore right you're
if anything you're saving them you're It's a moral thing to do.
Right.
It's the ultimate othering of formal, formally human beings.
Right.
What were formerly human beings.
And of course, there's all the prepper stuff that comes, the prepper fantasies of let's wall ourselves inside this compound and eat all this canned corn and, and, you know, make solar panels and live forever we don't need
anybody else right it's become like an internet sub-genre people being like here's how i would
prepare for the zombie apocalypse exactly here's some blueprints here's the shopping list like yeah
all that and obviously in a way that stuff is really fun and exciting because then you have
the pleasure of being like why aren't these idiots always just wrapping phone books around their forearms to protect themselves from the zombies?
Why aren't these people just putting on football helmets?
For God's sake, the first thing I would do is just find a football uniform and put it on.
I'd have shoulder pads and knee pads and zombies wouldn't be able to do shit to me.
It's weird how low zombie movies are on that kind of like ad hoc armor i think that's because
it's hard to identify with protagonists whose bodies are completely bulky and obscured although
people do love football which is crazy because those people are always you know suited up it's
always been the argument for why it's harder to be famous as a football player because you are not
seen because nobody can see you.
Yeah.
So, you know, the only people who are really seen are quarterbacks because they get so much attention.
And they're sitting on the, you know, sideline a lot.
And they're looking very serious.
And they're, you know, but like that's why it's tougher in a way to be a football player because you're kind of this anonymous, you know, soldier in this giant squadron.
Yeah.
because you're kind of this anonymous soldier in this giant squadron.
So when I was young and really getting into zombie movies,
the prepping stuff did not yet have the sort of right-wing militia,
QAnon associations that it has now in 2023.
But putting aside the political associations with zombie movies, I think for me, the zombie movie speaks to this suspicion I've always had, which is like, we're all just like one inch away from going completely feral. being a human and living in a society that functions is a very precarious situation that is the result of millennia of collective achievement and innovation. And it could really
come, it could really come apart at the seams at any moment. And that might be me showing a sort of
adolescent know-it-all performative nihilism. But I do think that certain events in the last
few years have kind of like reassured me that like, yeah, you were right. It doesn't take much.
Wait, wait, is there something going on with civilization? Are things okay?
Totally. And the reason that 28 Days Later really clicked with me on a really deep level that very few movies ever have.
So I don't know if you got, I'm older than you guys.
When 28 Days Later came out in the United States, it was 2003.
I think it came out in the summer of 2003.
Yep, late June 2003.
The United States had invaded Iraq in the spring of 2003, in mid-March.
And I was doing an online political cartoon at the time about the war on terror that was being waged by George W. Bush on behalf of all civilized society.
Yes, Get Your War On.
Exactly. Get Your War On was the name of the comic strip.
And I was, you know, reading a lot of newspapers and also reading a lot of books. And I had read two
books shortly before I saw this movie in the movie theater. And the movie really spoke, it felt like
it was in conversation with these books. The first book was the Samantha Power book called A Problem
from Hell, which is about genocide and America's response or lack of response to genocide in the
20th century. Right.
And specifically about how the entire concept of genocide was created by this guy named
Raphael Lemkin because he needed to name, he needed, there had never been a name for
the crime of trying to eradicate an entire population or an entire culture.
And then the other book is a tiny book by Chris Hedges, who was a former war correspondent called War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning.
And this book had a real impact on me because as a former war correspondent, Chris Hedges was writing about how exhilarating and addictive war can be.
war can be. In spite of the violence and in spite of the trauma,
it obviously can
create bonds of
patriotism among a population
because now you're united
in fighting someone else.
This is also that point in time where we're all
reacting from this unspeakable
tragedy that felt like... 9-11, yeah.
Yes, I'll say it. I'll say it.
9-11.
This awful tragedy.
And then you're like so quickly shifting to our most August beloved trusted voices in television news standing in front of tanks saying like, this is an awesome killing machine.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
You could feel like if you were opposed to the idea of a never-ending war on terror, and if you were opposed to invading and occupying Iraq while Afghanistan was still just like a total fucking shit show, you could feel really lonely and crazy.
Because there wasn't much in pop culture or even on the news that reflected that sensibility of skepticism and like, can we just like pump the brakes just a little before we go invade a second country in two years?
You know, I remember Letterman having Bill O'Reilly on his show and he would have him on so they could get antagonistic and fight about everything.
And Letterman would try to get some good blows in on him.
Bill O'Reilly came out with like a fucking gladiator helmet and a plastic sword and shield and was doing the like here we go
kind of thing right yeah but like letterman was really kind of drilling in to him on like why is
this war necessary like what is this war exactly why are we doing this war in this country at this
scale like all this sort of stuff right right now yeah and just that weird sense with the iraq war
where like a year out you were like
Oh wait they want to do that
And they're just kind of gonna do it
And they were just kind of slowly building
Like blocks up being like yeah
We're probably gonna do it
And you were just sort of like but why
And they were like I don't know we probably should right
And you're like I don't anyway
It's been a while since we've like redone the kitchen
Um
The
But O'Reilly was, you know, defending it from reactionary sort of whatever patriotic jingoistic.
We were hurt. We need to we can't stand idly by their attacking our values, what we represent as a country or whatever.
our values, what we represent as a country or whatever.
And Letterman, I thought, put it so well because he was so clumsy in how he was going about it in a way accidentally where he was like, look, I know nothing about politics.
I'm an idiot.
I don't understand this stuff.
I do relate to the basic idea of what you're saying, where when 9-11 happened, it felt
like such a moral wrong and it hurt so much that it felt like there has to be something we do in response to this.
And it just feels like you have taken advantage of that.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, the reason we invaded Iraq so soon after 9-11 is they were worried people would stop being like those emotions would dissipate you know the anger
and the hurt and
would disappear and then it would be hard to
justify an invasion that made no fucking
sense and cost a lot of money
and killed
many many many people and also killed over a hundred
Iraqis
the good news was it ended really quickly
right I'm checking my notes here
it was over within a...
It was a cakewalk, yeah.
It is...
I mean, look, I was 17 years old when we invaded Iraq.
I lived in England.
I was American.
I was just, you know, I was against the war.
I was also 17 years old.
You know, I was had i had what i had
at my disposal intellectually but um there was this sort of like weird insane burden of being
the america especially in england because britain had gone into the war and no one in britain liked
that thank you tony blair very little yeah yeah like there was very little excitement in britain
about the ir War, really.
And I was not living in some bubble.
I mean, I think most people know that.
And then I just felt this kind of, like,
embarrassment and sort of, like, lack,
you know, like, defensiveness,
but also this inability to really kind of explain
my country to people.
And I don't know.
It was a very unsettling time.
Good, good, good good good good
yeah good times yeah anyway carry on bad bad david bad oh sorry you're right you're right you're right
so all you know all this stuff was very much on my mind as a political cartoonist and going you
know you're going to all these massive anti-war protests in the back of your head you know it
doesn't make a it's not going to make a damn difference because they've already got all the
tanks and shit on the border ready to go.
But this Chris Hedges book, it's a short book.
You can read it in a day or two.
And because it's written from the perspective of someone who was for a while addicted to being a war correspondent.
Which is really what that's like.
My mom had friends who were war correspondents.
It was that kind of thing.
Why would you go back there?
And they're like,
I love it, you know.
I fucking love it.
It's apparently a crazy rush.
Right.
In the service,
you know, you're covering something
that's usually the last worst option
to actual war fighting, right,
and killing.
And he also talks a lot about how,
and Samantha Power talks about this in her book, and killing. And he also talks a lot about how, and Samantha Power talks about
this in her book, and this is obviously a huge part of the twist in 28 Days Later, is how often
sex and rape is used as a weapon of war. You can think of examples like the Rwandan genocide,
where the stories are just like 50,000 times more horrific than anything you would ever see
in a zombie movie. So I was thinking about all
this stuff and feeling a little crazy. And then, and this is really going to put it in, this is
really going to bring you back to that era. Okay. I was on the phone with one of the few people who
seemed willing to go on like Fox news and MSNBC and get yelled at for being skeptical of the war.
And that was the American comedian,
Janine Garofalo.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She really was an icon of the early two thousands.
She was like the only one who would do it.
Like everyone else was either too scared to go on TV or just wanted the war to
happen.
And she was,
you know,
very ardently skeptical and willing to be like the,
the abuse I'm going to suffer on this news broadcast that's
the price i'll pay to let people know that there are there are people out there who think this
might be a bad idea yeah and if people want to discuss this uh abstract idea of cancel culture
she had a sitcom on abc that had been filmed and she starts speaking out against the war on
news shows and they were just like oh
we're never gonna air this and they just put it on a shelf and it has still never been seen and
her career like immediately changed she stopped being someone hireable right in any public sphere
outside of her doing her own stand-up in the 90s she was an iconic character actress who is in
1 billion movies as like friends and sidekicks.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sometimes romantic interest and all that.
And then like in the 2000s, it was like, well, she's like on air America or whatever.
And like you say, and on like, you know, cable news as this like feisty person who will dare
actually be like, oh, I actually don't like George W. Bush or whatever, you know, like
anyway, um, that's so funny. Anyway, you were talking were talking wait did you say you were talking to janine garofalo
yeah because speaking of air america they were starting air america and she had called me about
some air america because we had been on panels together like we had met each other when we would
go to like a panel and be on like satire in the age of terror like i did a hundred of those types
of panels when i was a political cartoonist you know right, me, Janine Garofalo, Art Spiegelman, and then like somebody else, you know? So Janine had
called me to talk about something about Air America, I think. And she said, oh, by the way,
I saw this amazing movie. You've got to see it. It's called 28 Days Later. It's a zombie movie.
And my ears completely perked up like zombie movies why that's my favorite genre of movie
although i've never seen one that's intellectually sophisticated enough to satisfy my fancy pants
affect she said you've got to see this movie it's about what we're living through it's about the
iraq war people get infected with rage and go crazy i was like okay i'll check it out so sure
enough i went to go see it in the movie theater. And for a number of reasons.
From first, the fact that they shot it on a fucking fax machine.
It just looks so grimy.
Yeah, I mean, it really is like, it's so DIY, you know?
It's like, what if Operation Ivy made a zombie movie?
It doesn't even look like a Game Boy camera.
It looks like what the Game Boy printer would print out from the Game Boy.
Yeah, absolutely.
It just looked so weird.
And there were so many aesthetic choices, like the fact that the soundtrack is all just like super fuzzed out post-rock guitar soundtrack.
Oh, yeah. out post-rock guitar soundtrack oh yeah and then the political subtext that i brought to the movie probably because my head was swimming with these books by samantha power and chris hedges where
and this happens a lot in zombie movies where the people who you think are going to keep you safe
are actually as much of a threat as the zombies like that's one of the big lessons that we can
learn from zombie movies it's almost like like, you know, humanity, right, is the real monster.
Right, exactly.
There might not be that much separating us between us and the undead.
But the fact that it was an explicitly military compound and the first thing they wanted to
do basically was start raping the female protagonist and breeding a new society was like, oh, right,
because they're all jazzed up with war.
And there's this Eros Thanatos dynamic that you see so often in war fighting where you want to kill.
You kill people and then you're all your adrenaline is going crazy.
And then you just want to rape people like there were so many things in this.
This is not my favorite movie.
It's probably not even my favorite zombie movie.
But like I said, I don't think I've ever had an experience in a movie theater where the, basically the whole time I'm just sitting there being like,
yep,
yep.
And that's right on the head.
And you nailed that too.
Just everything about it.
It just really,
really clicked for me.
And I don't even like Danny Boyle movies that much.
Like,
Oh,
sure you do.
He's your favorite.
I like sunshine a lot until the last five or 10 minutes.
That's a great one with also a great soundtrack.
But like Trainspotting, I don't know.
I feel like the Trainspotting boys are just not your boys.
Well, I only saw it once, and I know my brother really likes Trainspotting.
He's a little bit younger than me.
I just remember, and this is actually a bone I have to pick with certain comedic zombie movies that can go unnamed at the risk of alienating some of your listeners
i remember there being some character in train spotting with a big goofy mustache who's like
incredibly violent yes beg okay right and sometimes it felt like that was played for
i'm at the age now i can't watch violence be funny.
It's just something switched in my head some years ago.
All those bad boy British movies that came out around the time of Trainspotting, people just beating the shit out of each other and it's so shocking and tacky and gauche.
How do you put it again, David?
What, that someone in a pork pie hat punches someone and says lovely jubbly?
Is that what you're talking about?
Yeah, that kind of stuff.
There's something about, I can't watch people.
You love that quote of mine, Griffin.
It's funny.
David, I know what you mean.
Can we talk about Shaun of the Dead for just a second?
A movie that people don't like that I don't like.
I'll give you 30 seconds of unreserved bile.
I don't dislike Shaun of the Dead.
I think it's quite well done.
I totally get why it had such an outsized impact.
But I remember feeling the way you're describing right now.
I think I've talked about this before very strongly, where when it made the pivot to sort of like despairing intense violence, I was like, i just don't think i can enjoy this like it and
still be laughing and like going like oh sean you know you're so silly like i have always struggled
with the tonal shift in that movie i just remember the scene where they're where they're just beating
the shit out of everybody in the pub listening to queens don't stop me now and i was like i was like
i can't i mean it's a master those guys always make these masterful
movies that are just like complete jewel boxes and it shows like absolute mastery of genre and
parody and everything and the opening of shauna the dead is just like so incredible where they
play with the tropes of things are slowly askew something's off and the guy doesn't even like all
this stuff is incredible filmmaking but when it comes comes to people beating, beating, and I know they're zombies, but they're people.
Like, zombies are people.
That's the fucked up thing that people have to wrap their head around.
It's what's so distressing about them.
Yeah, exactly.
They're not aliens.
They're not monsters in the same way.
They're not a different species.
Right.
I know they're arguably classified somewhat more as vampires than zombies.
Do you have opinions on I Am Legend, Last Man on Earth, Omega Man?
Because I feel like none of the adaptations have totally gotten this right,
although I do like all three of those movies on different levels. But that's the really interesting idea in that story is the realization from this guy at the end
of like, I'm fighting a species that now is its own functional civilization. I'm trying to eradicate
them. But like, I am the legend now. I am the sort of odd mythological creature.
They figure out a way to work that is functional for them.
I like Omega Man and I Am Legend.
I think those are both pretty good movies.
But like any post-apocalyptic movie or even some zombie movies, I think they're at their best when it's just like Will Smith walking around looking for people
and then there's a deer
in Times Square.
That's the best shit
of Will Smith's career.
It is,
but it's also,
it's the best shit
of this movie.
It's always,
well,
that's what I think anyway.
It's always to me
the most profound
special effect,
especially when it's
a movie like this
that's actually achieving
it practically.
Right.
Of just the eeriness
of an
empty city uh and then maybe yes something's a weird incongruity like a deer or whatever oh
nature has reclaimed blah blah you know like but and i think it's more i think it's more effective
in in 28 days later than i am legend because when i am legend it's years later and it's all overgrown
and that's obviously like cgi grass in the middle of times square but i like i am legend Legend, it's years later and it's all overgrown and that's obviously like CGI grass in the middle of Times Square.
I like I Am Legend a lot.
It's a really fun blockbuster.
I think it's good.
Yeah, I agree.
But yeah, no.
The 28 Days Later is eerie in ways that few movies like this
are genuinely eerie, I think.
It's like a De Chirico painting.
You know that artist De Chirico,
the mystery and melancholy of a city street?
When Jim is walking around London
in this weird, I guess it's like
dawn light and stuff,
it reminds me of those de Chirico paintings,
which are very dreamlike
and very, again, uncanny.
We'll get into this more, I'm sure.
But the sort of timeline
of Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's
positioning of this movie in the press when
they were promoting it, it felt like they very quickly tried to shake off the zombie title.
And it was like, well, they're not really zombies, so you shouldn't hold them to the
history of zombies. They're the infected. It's sort of its own thing. And then they
pivoted even more to being like, this isn't a movie about them. It's a movie about societal
collapse. The infected people aren't the important point.
And I think a lot of that was that zombie was a bit of a bad word.
It was seen as such a low rent thing that they didn't want to get tagged with that.
Yeah.
And they and they also, I think, didn't want nerds yelling at them about like zombies have to do this.
This is something like we're not trying to tell you what zombies do.
This is what zombies have to go to the mall as a critique of 1980s cap consumer
capitalism but i think you're right reese that it's like they're being honest in that the societal
collapse is the number one thing they're most interested in in this movie and the infected are
like means to an end but they're also saying something more interesting with the infected
than a lot of these modern movies are now i feel like we're talking around the insane thing
are you aware reese that this entire movie wrapped production before 9-11 happened?
Well, that was one of my questions that I was hoping someone would be able to answer because
I think, so I love that because then that serves another one of my little theses that I've created
in my mind. Because the movies that I compare this to most often in terms of how I responded
to the movie, these are, I'm going to name two other genre movies, two other horror thriller
genre movies that I found like a lot of comfort and insight in about the Trump administration,
even though they came out or even though they were in production, I think before Trump was elected.
Yeah, right.
And now that you've said this thing
about 28 Days Later,
it's the perfect analogy.
So I think of 28 Days Later
as one of the great movies
about quote unquote 9-11 and the Iraq war.
And it ironically was produced
before those happened, right?
So two of my favorite movies
of the last few years
are Green Room and The
Invitation. For a second, I processed that as Green Book, but yes, no, that makes more sense
what you're saying. Yes. Green Book is a distant third, but my top two are Green Room and The
Invitation. I think the movies I have talked to you the most about since I've known you are those
two. Yeah. Yes. Yeah. I think they have a lot to say about what we used to call quote unquote,
our current situation.
Um,
yes.
And so 28 days later,
it's the perfect analogy because yeah,
it's like,
and I guess that goes to,
I guess that goes to show that like some truths are universal and are not
necessarily explicitly pegged to the new cycle,
which is something I have a hard time believing as a former political
cartoonist who had a weekly deadline.
There are some truths about human nature and society and how precious and delicate all
these things are that you can make a movie about Trump before Trump is president.
But it's still kind of mind-blowing to me because when you respond to these movies,
or at least when I respond to them, I respond to them through such a specific political
lens that it just feels like it had to
have been made like after the fact you know this is the thing i've been thinking about a lot because
uh this year's crop of sort of oscar or oscar aspirational movies have mostly all bombed
in release uh and there's this sort of conversation it seems you're one of the people
pushing this point a lot the serious fall releases the uh right babelman's tar banshees
right whatever you know they all underperformed women talking things like that right and and the
point you keep making sims which i've been chewing on a lot, is, you know, people like me who rush to apocalyptic
thought are just saying like, well, I guess just the serious adult theater going audience has left.
There are now 500,000 people in the United States of America who will go see any serious movie.
And there's a ceiling on that. Right. and your take has been the movies that we're
looking at and and bemoaning the bombing of are all difficult and off-putting even it was it was
a tough crop it was a tough crop for what i perceive as sort of my boomer relatives and i do
not say boomer pejoratively who had been saying to me like i'm ready to start
returning to theaters what's out there what should i see and i would be like well you know you got
the fableman's it's kind of like a hugely autobiographical spielberg movie about movie
making you know like i would always tail off because i knew i did not have a hook for them
on any of these right like i knew that they weren't going to be like, oh, that sounds interesting.
You know, like, you know, even with tar,
which is probably the most sellable in a way,
you kind of just have to be like,
well, you know what?
You really just got to see it.
It's just kind of like a special thing,
like, or whatever.
Well, yeah.
And like on one side,
certain people are like,
I don't want to watch a fucking two and a half hour movie
about a hoity-toity conductor.
And then there's another side of person that's like,
is this some fucking cancel culture diatribe that i don't want to watch right then there's things like she
said that bomb and you're just like well kind of no surprise here right yeah no one on earth wants
to see that right i've seen some journalists sort of making this point not even making this point uh
i feel like i've seen some filmmakers making this point. I'm trying to remember who it was I saw said this, but it's really been ringing in my head a lot recently that like movies trying to meet the culture rarely work.
If you are responding to the thing that has already been crystallized in the national dialogue, we don't then want to watch a movie because we're already digesting this thing we don't need it
repackaged for us the post-Iraq war movies yes mostly failed at sort of attracting interest
because like you say people were just kind of like no I watched the news I don't I don't
and like the last big hits you know Oscar crossover war movie of that era is Black Hawk Down, which is the one that comes out right after right before the war starts.
You know, it's like another post 9-11.
It's that movie.
Yeah. Post 9-11 pre, I guess, invasion.
But but I do think there's that thing where it's like a movie like this 20 days later feels like, well, this has to be in response to the things that happened right before this movie came out.
But the reality is Danny Bell wasn't a fortune teller.
He couldn't see the way that things were going to like manifest and bubble over.
But this movie is verbalizing things that were percolating.
He could feel what was like about to erupt
what if he had access to the presidential daily briefing that said bin laden determined to invite
the united to attack us he was like okay there's a movie in here somewhere so maybe he was passing
off the boy right condi rice was actually using danny boyle as a sounding board yeah
what's going on but even watching movies like this 20 years later you can feel
the difference between this is a movie made by someone who's been reading the newspapers every
day and is trying to find a way to dramatize the thing that is happening in front of all of us
versus this is danny boyle struggling to verbalize something that is a little bit unspeakable at that
moment and then like lucky for him unlucky for culture by the time the movie
comes out everything had come to a head and now it was understandable by everybody you know but i do
think it's that thing of like movies don't meet the culture the culture meets the movies in terms
of the things that really stick a movie is somehow getting at something that then happens to overlap with what's going on culturally in the time it comes out.
Arrival's another one where I remember seeing that movie at an early screening and going like, this thing's great.
It's going to bomb really hard.
And then it came out the week after Trump was elected and was a surprise hit.
And it's like this movie was in no way a response to Trump.
Yeah, but that movie feels so profoundly.
in no way a response to Trump.
Yeah, but that movie feels so profoundly,
it's all about like we can't be talking past each other and like, you know, things can get out of hand so easily.
And well, you know, I mean, I love that movie.
Suddenly all these things in that movie
that felt a little heady and inaccessible
a month earlier when I had seen it
felt like very accessible to everyone, you know?
Or not to everyone, but you know what I'm saying.
No, no, no, 100%.
I don't know how many movies we've covered on this show
that are like that, but this is certainly one of them.
You know, that weird, like,
how did this movie get ahead of the thing?
And how does it still, 20 years later,
feel like a better statement on this era
than anything that came out of it?
Let me crack into the dossier unless you want to say something david well i just wanted to say i really like the way you are
the way you explain that griffin because as a former political cartoonist who sometimes does
other stuff like my default my default mode of pop culture making i think is a is a sort of
like immediate didacticism that doesn't leave any room for like the ebb and flow of actual
lived human experience you know and the idea that a that a good artist can anticipate something
that's bubbling up in the culture and express it and kind of get out ahead of it, even if their artifact isn't released until after it, whatever it is, is really interesting.
And I guess that's why people still read Shakespeare, because you're operating on a level that is not dictated by weekly deadlines and whatever the news of the week is and Fallujah or whatever.
But you're actually a regular rotation.
You're part of that dialogue in real time.
Yeah, that's true, too.
I don't mean to beat up on myself, but you're right.
It's a completely different, I mean.
A movie, you have to know that whatever you're making needs to make sense a year out from the point where you're starting it, if not more.
And most political cartoons are essentially just like subway graffiti like you read it and it's
gone and it doesn't age well and there's no reason for it to age well because it's that's not what
the it's on its purpose right it's it's a real time processing thing rather than movies which
have to in some way be some mirror of something broad enough that it makes sense removed from time yeah yeah uh let's
crack open that dos yeah so here's just so obviously danny boyle's whole thing is that you
know he had made uh these movies with increasing budgets and the beach is this the most unwieldy
thing he ever made he didn't enjoy anything about that and so he's sort of like i have to downsize
uh and in between he makes two TV movies for the BBC
that are written by Jim Cartwright,
who is a playwright and who he'd worked with in the 80s.
People have asked us why we're not doing
Vacuuming Completely Nude in Paradise.
David, you had this response to someone asking about something else.
Holy shit, did he make that?
Yes.
He did.
Do you love that?
I think I saw that.
It's good.
Is there a scene with like
a vacuum salesman on the beach?
Yes, correct.
I've seen that.
That's Danny Boyle?
That's Danny Boyle.
That's his wilderness period.
What the fuck?
What was my response, Griffin?
I don't remember.
It was a different question
of someone saying,
are you going to cover this on the show?
And your response,
which I now just think,
oh, this is the evergreen response anytime anyone asks us, why aren't you going to cover this on the show? And your response, which I now just think, oh, this is the evergreen
response anytime anyone asks us, why aren't you including
this in this miniseries? There's only so much time.
There's only so much time in the world.
But I do recommend
Vacuuming Completely Nude in Paradise with
Timothy Spall, which I have seen
and is enjoyable.
I have not seen the other thing
he made the same year, which is called
Strumpet with Christopher Eccleston.
Also by Jim Cartwright.
I think Vacuuming is currently on Amazon Prime in the States.
It's free to watch.
I saw it was streaming somewhere recently.
That was like a sort of well-reviewed.
I mean, Britain has this great tradition of the sort of the TV movie,
like in a way that America kind of
doesn't anymore and like, you know, it's like
a sterling example of that.
And I think it was just good for him
to be like, okay, I have no money.
I have very little time.
The way he puts it is like the budget for those two
films wouldn't have covered like the catering of the beach,
but he just kind of needed
to, you know, reset.
He starts working with Anthonyony dodd mantle on
those i think vacuum is the first movie he does with anthony dodd mantle where he starts to develop
this new uh a simplified stripped down style that very much leads to 28 days later where it's like
let's not care about how it looks anthony dodd, very interesting because obviously he's going to win an Oscar
with Danny Boyle for Slumdog Millionaire,
but I first knew him as he's the dogma guy.
He did Peston and Mifune and Julian Donkey Boy,
and Dogville is his sort of...
He did all these stripped-down, insane dogma movies.
Just to clarify, it's not that they don't care if it looks good,
but it's that Boyle starts to become less precious
and feels freed up by how small the cameras are,
how sort of like wide these sensors are.
And rather than making anything picturesque, pretty,
he's like, well, what's the freedom?
How much more can I move around?
How much quicker are setups?
How many more camera placements can I get in a day?
When I interviewed Soderbergh about, what's it called? High Flying Bird, which he shot on an iPhone, much quicker are setups how many more camera placements can i get in a day when i interviewed
soderbergh about uh what's it called high flying bird which he shot on an iphone that was his whole
argument for it was just like we can just walk and like down new york city you know fucking walk
down broadway and be like walk walk walk walk walk this looks like a good spot set up five minutes
you know like you know you can just like be ready to go immediately uh so you know this is the early days of digital obviously but yes they're working with all that
stuff so never going back to film never never going back to film do you know that reference
yes david lynch that's what david lynch said when someone asked him about inland empire
never going back to film never going back to film.
Never going back to film.
Sims, we should touch on Alien Love Triangle quickly.
Is that in the dossier here?
It's not.
It's in the Beach dossier, but let me find it.
But obviously that is, it's such a strange.
I just also think Reese will find this interesting.
Is that one of your sponsors?
Next week. Yeah. They're a of your sponsors? Next week.
They're a new THC gummies company.
They're a combo
mattress
rental company.
In the late 90s,
Weinstein,
Dimension, Miramax
had this idea to do
an anthology movie where they went to three different directors, and each of them did a 30-minute sci-fi short film.
And the three directors were Guillermo del Toro, Gary Fleeter, and Danny Boyle.
And the other two films both, when they watched the results, went, why don't you shoot like another hour of this and make this a feature?
So one third of that becomes Mimic, Guillermo del Toro's American debut, a film he had a very difficult time making and has talked about at length.
One of them becomes Impostor, the Gary Sinise movie that's sort of an odd curio.
Okay, Dick.
Yeah.
Yes.
And basically got dumped on release, but some people kind of have to defend.
And then the third one was Danny Boyle's called Alien Love Triangle that has to date been screened one time.
The world's like smallest screening room at a at a train station uh mark kermode uh the
famed british film critic showed it at the smallest theater in the uk which is la charette
which indeed is uh built from a railway carriage or something um which sounds fun uh it stars
kenneth branna and courtney cox and heather graham Cox and Heather Graham it's never
you know been shown
really again so I don't
you know there's nothing more to say about it really
no it was screened for like
10 people in a converted train car
I don't think it's ever leaked out
it's never shown again
it's been this odd curio for so long
especially because
in the years where the beach bombs and between that and him reemerging with 28 Days Later where he's in TV, it's sort of like, what happened to Danny Boyle?
His movies can't even get finished or released now.
He had a movie with like three big stars.
The premises list on Wikipedia is Steve Chesterman is a scientist who has created a teleportation device and hopes to use it for various purposes.
He then goes home to his wife to share the news, but he learns she is surprised.
She is from outer space.
It leads to a string of unusual events where beings from space come to visit Chesterman and his friends and show that all is not as things seem.
It's written by John Hodge and produced by Andrew McDonald.
It's the classic team of the first three movies.
Yeah.
I like that he invented a teleportion device
and planned to use it for various purposes.
Various.
That is good of him.
Yeah, that he wasn't just like,
not going to use this at all
or only going to use this to bet on basketball games
or whatever.
You know, he had a lot of ideas.
But doing the TV movies,
I think was also probably somewhat a reaction
to his frustration
of that never even getting seen yeah yeah sure yeah i don't he's really not talked about that
movie at all uh which is interesting uh so alex garland obviously wrote the novel the beach he did
not write the movie but he sits down with andrew mcdonald the producer of the beach and all of
danny boyle's movies and says, I've got an idea.
He was sitting at a pizza place in a street in London
called Charlotte Street. I think I know that
pizza place. And he said, I've got an
idea for a film. It's about running zombies
and it's got daylight and it's in London.
That is his pitch.
And Andrew McDonald says, that
sounds cool. And so Alex Garland
goes off and writes a
spec script. Andlex garland does not
care about using the word zombies he's like i don't care about the technical differences i don't
care if they're reanimated or not like it does there this this film is in the lineage of zombie
movies obviously uh and uh the resident evil films which we did not mention, of course, David.
Oh, right.
That's a blind spot in my zombie canon.
I've never seen a Resident Evil film, although I have watched somebody play that game.
And I remember being really exciting and scary.
Uh, Romero was supposed to direct Resident Evil, by the way, Reese.
Yes.
Oh, really?
He had directed a commercial for the video games that got a lot of buzz. Yes. Oh, really? And then I think they sort of got scared at the last second about him not making something accessible enough and flipped over to Paul W. Sanderson.
It was a very loose adaptation of the game.
There was some anxiety about that.
There's just a weird scenario where Paul W. Sanderson was actually working on another zombie movie.
And they were like, we're going to turn this into Resident Evil.
It's all very strange.
But so that is a fair point that Alex Garland is making where he's like,
I did not revive the zombie genre resident evil.
The video game really was the beginning of the revival.
And I'm drafting off of that a little bit.
And obviously there is the movie,
although the movie at the time,
I mean,
it did okay,
but it was not well received.
Like,
no,
I love those films.
I I'm fond of them.
I'm fond of the series and the directions that go in but
the first film video game fans were like this is not like the game and then regular critics were
like this is like trash this is like stupid bullshit like you know so it was not really
like a landmark and horror people were like we could have gotten a romero movie and we got this
instead it feels very sort of wafting off the vibes of The Matrix and Equilibrium and that whole era.
So another huge inspiration for Garland.
Have you ever read The Day of the Triffids, David Rees?
I've had it recommended to me, but I've never read it.
But I know the basic premise.
And when I was talking to your former guest, John Hodgman, about the fact that I was doing this episode, he said, well, you know, they ripped off the opening of this movie
from Day of the Triffids. I said, no, but I'll be sure to mention that. Isn't that also basically
what Body Snatchers is pulled from Triffids as well? Yeah, that it's a plant-like organism.
And obviously now we've got The Last of Us out there that's also you know evil fungus is what we have to fear but uh yes day of the triffids opens with a guy in the hospital waking
up being like what the fuck is going on so he does uh garland shouts that out he's like i'm a huge
fan of that book uh he's also a huge jg ballard fan and jg ballard had done a lot of post-apocalyptic
writing you know in his life.
So he likes that.
But the way Garland puts it that I feel like will resonate with you guys the most is this was just a paranoid story coming out of the paranoid time.
Lots of stuff was happening in this country that felt like the right kind of
social subtext or commentary that you could put in a science fiction films,
a film.
Danny was particularly interested in the issues that had to do with social
rage, the increase of rage in our society. The other thing to mention, films uh film danny was particularly interested in the issues that had to do with social rage
the increase of rage in our society the other thing to mention britain had just been dealing
with mad cow disease i know that sounds crazy but i lived in britain during the mad cow thing and it
was it is sort of a unique societal thing that everyone was like if you eat beef you might go
crazy later like uh and i didn't eat beef for like years.
Like, we just couldn't eat beef.
And to bring it back to 9-11,
I couldn't donate blood in 9-11
because I had studied in England during the 90s.
Really?
And they wouldn't let people who had lived in England.
Yeah.
I have never been able to donate blood for that reason.
I think it's finally over,
but there's some giant like like, sort of window.
Like, it's like 10 years or something.
I have this very distinct memory in the mid-90s
going to Taco Bell with my mom and her saying,
you're no longer allowed to get beef tacos.
You only eat chicken tacos now.
Right.
There was the huge concern about, like, cheap beef.
Right.
Like, fast food beef.
And she explained the mad cow thing to me,
and I was like, it's called mad cow and it makes you insane.
It sounds like science fiction.
Yeah, it does.
I mean, as a young child hearing my mother explain it to me in that context,
while I'm at the counter getting ready to order Taco Bell,
it felt truly like a fucking nightmare dystopian premise where i'm like you take one bite
of it like i thought it would be as quick as what happens to brendan gleason in this movie
right one bite of the taco you're saying goodbye to your mom i love you very much stay away from
me stay away from me yes yes the mad cow thing is fascinating that's such an interesting sense
that makes a lot of sense i had no idea it isn't i hadn't made that connection either but that is interesting but so boyle is not that interested in like zombie movies he doesn't like the sort of
aesthetic of them he doesn't like the lumbering corpses uh and so he does of course like that the
the zombies are running uh in this and as you guys had already mentioned he's in the contemporary
press is sort of distancing himself from the zombie genre.
Um,
and,
uh,
is more talking about like football,
hooliganism and road rage.
It's a movie about society.
Post-Thatcherism.
Right.
You know,
like all this stuff.
uh,
you know,
I guess also the,
the,
the biohazard logo of the movie,
which is so simple and so effective
that was used in all the advertising
conjures like Ebola
and things like that you know other kind of like
pandemic stuff that had happened in the 90s that I feel
like had become this sort of scary
specter it's all it's all it's just a really
good mix of things that's hitting at the exact
right time which is basically what we were talking about for the first
hour of this podcast right
what good groundwork we laid.
Good job by us, I think.
You know, we didn't talk about fucking,
you know, Captain Crunch
or whatever we usually talk about on the show.
We didn't talk about Shrek, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Shrek.
I still got to see that.
I still haven't seen it.
I know we talked about it the last time I was here.
I'd love to watch it with you.
I'll say this.
Maybe we'll do it sometime.
We were having the debate, Rhys,
because we're like settling on our March Madness brackets
where we let people vote on what we cover.
Oh, right.
On Patreon, we do franchises like that.
And we were like, let's not put Shrek on there.
We don't want to fucking actually have to sit down
and watch the four Shrek movies.
There's four of them?
Yes.
Yes, and that's not counting the two Puss in Boots films.
If you were watching four Shreks with us,
I would want to do that that i'm not putting you on
the spot this isn't a formal offer but i'm like that's the one way i'd want to watch those four
movies is through your eyes i i think for david we could cap it at like two he doesn't need to
see the third and no if i'm if i'm gonna watch one i'm gonna watch them all wait i'm sorry you're
pitching simultaneously strapped down to a gurney like the monkey at the beginning of 28 Days Later.
Right, right.
David, you're pitching an escape route to David Rees.
You're looking David Rees in the eyes and saying,
you want to like not finish something?
You want to start to it,
but sort of like half commit to it?
So another thing about this movie
that we can talk about sort of a little bit later,
obviously, is like the script was always in flux especially the ending and they filmed multiple endings
the film was released in america with two different endings as kind of a gimmick i was wondering about
that because i remember seeing two different endings in the theater and i couldn't figure
out how that was possible yes if you saw it six times or whatever right yeah exactly
um there's an alternative ending where jim dies uh which is the the bleak sort of ending um
and uh then there's a third ending that they didn't actually shoot but is in like sort of
storyboards and you can watch it on the dvd where they like find a scientist in the bunker who maybe
has an antidote yep i've I've seen that too. Right.
And he decided that he was basically ripping off
Near Dark, which is one of his favorite movies.
Catherine Bigelow's Near Dark.
Which sort of has that idea in it.
One of the cleverest things this movie
does, in my opinion, is it casts
a basically unknown Irish actor named
Cillian Murphy in the lead role.
Ends up being a pretty good find.
Who is a great find.
He'd been in a movie called Disco Pigs,
which I saw.
They saw a play that he had originated the lead in,
I think.
Yes, correct.
And Disco Pigs is very interesting
because it's about these two people
who talk in this kind of like weird way.
It's got like a clockwork orange sort of slang language right right right
elaine cassidy who i had a huge crush on at the time uh is the female lead of that and uh it's
it's a cool movie but he's basically nobody and they're very much going for i feel like let's cast
let's not cast stars partly for budget reasons but i think partly just to feed the kind of, you know,
random anonymity of the movie, right?
I mean, it's kind of part of it.
You have Eccleston and Gleeson
who come in later
and are sort of like familiar faces,
but your main three leads
are all basically unknown
at this point in time.
They each had one or two credits between them.
Naomi Harris had been a child actor?
She'd done television.
Exactly. As a child. And she had been a child actor? She'd done television. Exactly.
As a child. And she had just been in
White Teeth. No, White Teeth comes out
right after in Britain. There's an adaptation
of Zadie Smith's novel on television, which is
good. Which she's really good in.
But yeah, she was basically
unknown. Killian's basically unknown.
I feel like they're just both very special.
Like, you know.
Killian is like childlike and kind of beautiful
and so striking
even in the like low res,
you know, visuals of it.
And you kind of can't stop looking at him,
which is really helpful.
That's the thing.
I remember seeing the trailer for this movie
and A, it was alarming in 2003
in the States to be in a movie theater
watching trailers that all look vaguely the same.
And then this thing coming up
and going like,
why does this look like
a dupe of a snuff film
at Kim's video?
Right.
Like, why does this look like this?
And then who's this guy
at the center of it?
And he doesn't really look
like any other human being
you've ever seen.
There is something
about Cillian Murphy
that is simultaneously
so pretty and so creepy.
There's that story Christopher Nolan tells about like he screen tested for Batman and you can watch Cillian Murphy's Batman audition to play the Batman, Megan the Batman, where he's wearing Val Kilmer's suit.
And he was like, Nolan was like, you know, I realized two things immediately the second we started filming the screen
test. One was, he's fundamentally
wrong for Batman, and two is,
I'm witnessing one of the best actors of
his generation.
But there was just something about him, you
have to, like, weaponize that weird
unnerving quality,
and this character is so reactive
in so many ways.
Just his face popping up in the trailer
added to the already a sallow sense of alarm i felt from how weird the movie looked
it's so funny his career is so interesting and it is yes he gets the batman screen test off of this
yeah and he was the runner-up and you can watch the screen test and you're like oh that's
interesting but he does seem a little too creepy and i can see why they shifted him over to play the scarecrow and then you watch the christian
bale screen test and you're like oh my god like he's he had the entire performance immediately
like you know you're like right how do you not he had the whole thing figured out right right right
but but kelly murphy it's also like there's something so sensitive about him it's not just
the delicacy of his face but there's something so tender in his like spirit
to have the lead character you know uh of your horror movie have that balance where he's
simultaneously more sympathetic and a little bit unnerving than most of what you're used to seeing
in a horror film well he plays it plays very very directly against like the idea of like you know like the
walking dead guy rick who's like the rugged cop sheriff right right who's exactly the guy you want
to be leading your band of humans against the against the zombie hordes this guy's like a bike
courier he's got a weird haircut he weighs like 80 pounds first thing he wants to go do is check
in on his mom and his dad which is very sweet and endearing and he's got these like sleepy ice blue eyes right but what you're talking
about is something that can often annoy me about the zombie genre which is that kind of like
everyone seems to know how to use a weapon really fast and all that like where you're like
i wouldn't you know just be kind of like checking my chamber and like
you know like you know loading my semi-auto like right away like i wouldn't know what to do and no
one in this right yeah what to do really except like drive cars this is the single best idea in
this movie it is the thing that i only am re-watching it now i think truly appreciated for
the first time to have the movie be based around this idea that a guy's been in a coma for 28 days
and in those 28 days,
society's collapsed.
Right.
And you're just jumping to the point
of like how things got this bad
this quickly.
Everyone else knows the rules
but this guy.
Exactly.
And obviously,
the simple, effective,
rapid brilliance of this
is the way they shoot London,
which is sort of legendary at this point, where they essentially would just set up a bunch of digital cameras at like five in the
morning stop traffic for like two minutes and you know get an empty streetscape right and then run
run on like you know and they were doing it without permits you know basically every day of
recording started with them trying to get one shot of like
a vacant area right this is part of the 9-11 thing david is like danny boyle's been like we're
shooting on like the westminster bridge we're shooting near whitehall like this is the seat
of power in britain like it's you know where the government is we would have been immediately
arrested post yeah right yeah if it had just been a little bit later right yeah but it gets credited
so much as oh this is the movie that most successfully evokes the uneasy feeling of new
york in the immediate wake of 9-11 and he's like 9-11 would have prevented us from getting this
one and the other thing the movie does and this is probably because of its budget it can't afford
the spectacle of world war z where there's a million extras and zombies is a lot of those wide shots especially after selena has killed mark and it's just her and jim there's just these
really wide shots it's like yeah the end of the world would probably be pretty lonely like yeah
pretty desolate and the and the and the uncanniness of the fact that the streets are not littered with
the bodies of the dead.
It's not just that society has collapsed.
It's also like the rapture, like everybody's just disappeared.
For this guy waking up, he's not waking up to like a massacre.
It's this uneasy, there's something poetic and beautiful about it, but it's lonely and sad and just immediately off-putting.
It does feel like an odd dream you would have. I mean, it's very similar to the Vanilla Sky opening,
where it's like something's fundamentally off in reality right now.
The Vanilla Sky opening is a good magic trick as well.
The empty Times Square thing is so cool.
And it's another thing that comes out after 9-11
and never could have been shot after 9-11.
An interesting quote about one of our former subjects,
Danny Boyle says, Kubrick would make his films through the studio system but he worked with so few people his crews were so tiny
uh that's why warner brothers allowed him to shoot for so long because day by day didn't cost that
much like and that's what boyle says like he was trying to do the same kind of thing of like yeah
you know like i'm gonna take my time over here but like we're like we're only working for a few hours a day and it's only a few people like yeah there's
not a lot of people on payroll this isn't like some massive production where every fucking day
we go over schedule or whatever it's a disaster for the studio yeah right um yeah the other thing
that is it's just i love it so much it London, much like New York,
everyone on Earth has an image of what it looks like in their head.
And to see it look different is just the coolest thing in the world.
It's so desolate and scary and it's so evocative.
Yeah, it's an incredible opening.
And the trailer would lead with this,
and it just immediately grabbed you. But I have a question question about this can i ask you a question about that opening scene when he
comes out the scene of him looking at all the flyers the missing persons flyers
that has to be post 9-11 uh so so yes so griffin the movie did not start did not film uh sorry did
not finish before 9-11 it It started shooting on September 1st,
2001. And they shot
all of this stuff immediately.
And 9-11
happens, obviously, a
week and a half later. And Boyle
does say, like, it changed the movie.
It became about how we felt vulnerable
to something happening.
It became about how vulnerable cities are.
And we set out to make this film about social rage and it became a more complex response so obviously the film the
script had already been written the film's been planned but it is at least in their head a little
bit right place right time it's seeping into the dna sure yeah the missing persons thing has yeah
that's like because those were all i remember being downtown after 9 11 and that stuff was everywhere you guys must remember that too if you were there yeah yeah yeah uh
weird time yeah pretty upsetting i lived in london obviously and i yeah i had weird sort of feelings
about it like missing being in new york like you know i felt like guilty that i wasn't there it was
a very strange sort of emotional thing. You know,
I have other friends
who had left New York
before 9-11
and said the same thing
that they felt really guilty
and they weirdly,
you know,
they felt like
they had betrayed
the city or something.
But David's also got
a Mark Wahlberg approach
where he believes
if he had been here
it would have gone down
like that.
Oh, right.
That's why he feels guilty.
He thinks he could have stopped it.
Yeah.
The thing I remember most profoundly
is the first time I went to New York after 9-11
was in the spring, so like April 2002.
And my parents had worked downtown
because, well, especially my mom was a city hall reporter,
so she worked downtown right by the trade center.
And when the first time we went down there,
they were like, it's so bright
because the towers were gone.
The sun was suddenly like shining down. And they were like, they were trying to because the towers were gone. It was so, the sun was suddenly like shining down.
And they were like, they were trying to tell me like,
you don't understand.
It's like really different, just atmospherically.
Like anyway, so they're making this movie
on these digital cameras that are so new.
And they've got this kind of anarchic production approach.
I don't mean anarchic, like chaotic. I mean, this kind of anarchic production approach.
I don't mean anarchic, like chaotic.
I mean this kind of just like, you know, guerrilla style.
We're going to run and go.
Yeah, DIY.
Yes, right.
It's the dogma thing. It's sort of a punk response to how film was seen and how it could be made.
And like the way all the quotes in this dossier are just just like it's true kind of like they're a cadre they all are just like we all cared about this so much we
you know there was only a few of us on the crew so it was like a real you know band of brothers
thing like there's no hierarchy we were all in it together uh so that's pretty cool which i think
when you're talking about those tiny crew and the diy and it being anarchic like so the
music that is that plays as jim wanders the empty streets of london and it kind of builds and it
builds this incredible crescendo of guitars and cellos the original music was by godspeed you
black emperor it's called like an instincts right it was like a which was like an instrumental post-rock kind of band and they are very political they're a canadian right they're
canadian band yeah the most political nation on earth lift your skinny fists like antennas to
heaven yeah i had that yeah you know i remember you know the the hands the label the lp right
yeah on it yeah and so danny Boyle really wanted to use their music.
And they agree.
They don't usually like licensed stuff because they're anti-capitalists.
And they agreed.
But then once I think Fox got involved as an investor or a distributor, then they're like, you can't use our songs as a bait and switch.
Why is this fucking Pepsi can being promoted here in this movie?
This is not us.
And I think that's one of the reasons it's so hard to see now is the music rights or
clearance i think that's because this movie is impossible to stream right now now it was available
recently ish so i don't really know what the vibe you want to know what's weird i got this and 28
weeks later as a bundle on it iTunes within the last couple of months
in anticipation of doing this series.
And then I went to check iTunes
and it was missing.
Right.
This is the thing about DCM.
They can just take it away.
Just taken away.
I bought it.
I have like through movies everywhere,
my library linked to other things.
So then when I went on to like Amazon
or Vudu, it was there.
But it's,
it's weird how recently this is movie has been stricken from iTunes.
Yeah.
I have the,
the two disc set with 28 weeks later.
That's what I have.
Yes.
I have that too.
This is a pretty absurd movie to watch on Blu-ray.
Yes.
Blu-ray is like high def.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Cause this movie is in like four like high def. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Because this movie is in like 480p, basically.
Right.
Yeah.
And, you know.
Sometimes it feels like it's in like 1p.
Or like 2i.
We shot in binary.
Yeah.
It's kind of, it's the way we're so, I feel like our eyes are now so adjusted to these
like 4k streaming websites that can just produce these relatively impressive images that we kind of take for granted.
There's more of a shock to it now, maybe.
Watching this feels like when we've watched the director's cut of Swing Shift or the musical cut of I'll Do Anything where you're like, this is
like a VHS that was smuggled out. This thing is like so degraded, it's hard to even make out what
you're seeing. Which is part of the magic of it, right? Like it feels like you're watching some
secret thing. Yeah. Yeah. Same with Night of the Living Dead being in black and white. It's that
you have this distancing dreamy filter as opposed to like World War Z, which is probably shot on some of the nicest cameras in the world with a trillion dollar budget.
There's only – it looks too nice to really get under your skin, at least for me.
This is also coming at the exact point that like George Lucas and Michaeln and some of these guys are standing up and going like
you can shoot video video is becoming high definition enough that you can shoot video
and play that in a movie theater and people will not revolt and so we're like right on the precipice
attack the clones has come out but otherwise like the precipice of these people we're going to start
to experiment with high def video and turning into like a valid medium and a valid format at least.
And then Danny Boyle is like doing the exact opposite thing where he's like
scale it back,
pull it back on video camera.
Yeah.
Right.
Um,
obviously there is a sequel to this film 28 weeks later,
which we are going to talk about on our Patreon.
Boyle does not direct it because he doesn't want to do the same thing twice, although he does
do some first AD stuff
on it. I don't know if I knew that.
I thought he directed the opening sequence,
the legendary... I think that's what he does.
Yeah, right, which is really cool
from what I remember. Which is
exhilarating and terrifying and the best
part of the movie. And obviously, like, Robert Carlyle
is in it. You know, it's got, like, sort of
Danny Boyle favorites.
We're going to be covering it on Patreon.
Yes, we will.
But they have, Garland and Boyle have both been talking about doing a 28 Months Later.
Yes.
There's some idea they have that they like.
They had a script at the time.
I think, weirdly, 28 Weeks was seen as a disappointment,
even though it outgrossed 28 Days.
But the expectations had gotten so much higher
and they had the script they wanted to do.
And Danny Boyle was like, I liked the idea so much,
I might have to come back to direct it.
But then the excitement had sort of gone away.
And now recently Boyle has been saying like,
I really like that script.
I'd like to do something with it.
I can't imagine what is happening in pop culture right now
also that would make them think these kinds of things would be relevant.
Nothing.
What are you guys talking about?
What's that Ben?
Sorry.
What are you talking about?
I don't understand.
Ben is infected.
Ben is currently,
currently infected.
We're doing this episode remotely.
Uh,
everyone,
uh,
calm down.
Uh,
Kelly Murphy was like,
well, I can't do this movie anymore
because it's been more than 28 months.
I'm like old now.
I don't look the same.
And Sims and I were texting about this
where it's like,
oh, it's crazy that he could do 28 years later now.
It's getting close to that
because this film is now basically 20 years old.
Obviously, 28 months later would just be a couple years later.
Right.
But doing 28 years would be interesting.
Yeah, so maybe that's what they do.
I don't know.
It is amazing how...
It's just crazy.
Obviously, Nolan blows him up and uses him plenty,
and that's part of his...
And Boyle uses him to get in sunshine
obviously but like he's gonna be the lead of a gigantic movie this summer right playing the
jay robert oppenheimer for chris vernon he's done like six seasons of a global blockbuster tv show
yeah is he the most famous he's ever been now because of peaky Blinders like is that true? Yes it is right? Yeah. Peaky Blinders
have you seen Peaky Blinders
David at all? You might enjoy
it those British gangsters
I don't think so
that is what
Cillian Murphy is old-timey British gangsters
right? Yes Brummy
gangsters from the 19
zeros you know like gentlemen
might have watched half an episode
with Emily and just been like this isn't for
me
Tom Hardy plays a rabbi
in a few seasons I was gonna say
there's there's some drop-ins
in that one anyway
let's talk about the plot of the film a little bit
obviously we've been talking about
some of our favorite stuff in the film
but do you guys like the opening the the pre-Killian Murphy sequence
with the infected chimpanzee and the panicked doctor
played by British comedian David Schneider and all this stuff?
And extreme animal rights activists.
Who were such a thing back then.
And they don't exist anymore.
The 12 monkeys guys.
It's just gone.
It's just gone from the culture. Don't exist anymore. Ben, clearly guys. Yeah, it's just gone. It's just gone from the culture.
It doesn't exist anymore.
Ben, clearly someone hasn't seen the last two Jurassic World movies.
Go on, David.
You're right, I haven't.
You're right.
But like, wasn't that such a trope in the 90s where people were like,
oh, left-wing terrorists who are, you know, crunchy, you know?
Yeah, Earth Liberation Front and stuff like that.
So I made a list watching all these zombie movies of like some of the common tropes in zombie movies, which are like so obvious that you don't even need to really spend too much time listing them.
But it's really interesting how many of them 28 days later subverts or upends or just gets out of the way entirely.
And one of the cool things about this movie that I had forgotten is that it opens with this montage, and this is very common in zombie movies, news montage of society falling apart.
And these montages, like in World War Z, you have the classic thing where Brad Pitt is making waffles or pancakes for his kids at breakfast and is distracted by what's on the TV, which is plague is making everyone go crazy.
Right?
Always love to have the ominous background news
information that you can pick up on before the character does in zach snyder's remake of dawn
of the dead it opens with news montage of crazy zombie violence and a johnny cash song it's really
effective 28 days later is not subverting that because it came out before it, but it's interesting
that when you see the opening news montage of violent imagery, if you know you're watching a
zombie movie, you think this is the classic trope of, look at society falling apart because of the
zombies. But it's not that. It's just the news. It's just another day watching the news for this
poor monkey because they're trying to enrage the monkey, right? So the very first shot speaks to the fact of, oh, you think zombies and humans are different?
Turns out they share a lot in common.
They love fighting and killing.
This is a thing I remember not being, even though this is the first bit of information you basically get in the entire movie.
I don't remember this being part of the marketing.
I don't remember this being part of the marketing i don't remember this being part of interviews they were downplaying so much how much it was a zombie movie or wasn't a zombie movie uh it felt a little mind-blowing when you're just
used to the rules of like it's infection it's a disease it's this and that to have this movie
open with they showed a monkey too much violence and he got so angry.
Right.
Then eco terrorists freed him and he started biting people.
And now the mad monkey made everyone go insane.
I mean, between blaming everything on the media and then some left wing eco terrorists showing up and bringing about the destruction of the world, you think think it was written by William F. Buckley Jr. or something.
It really does start off as what could be read as a really conservative movie.
On paper, it reads that way, yes.
Is the idea that they're trying to reverse engineer something,
that if we can find out what causes rage, we can cure it?
Is that the idea of this experiment?
I don't know what they're trying to do.
I think it's just a foolish fucking thought experiment.
Let's see what rage does to a brain.
It's very similar to what they do to create Blanca in the Street Fighter movie, of course.
Of course.
Yes, yes.
They also show him the news.
Right.
With Blanca, they just sort of show him like History Channel Hitler documentaries
or whatever, but yeah, same idea.
Oh, yes.
I don't know.
I read it as them not necessarily
having an end goal other than like,
let's just see what this does to a brain.
It is funny that when they come in
to try to free him,
the scientist knows exactly what has happened.
He's like, I know who you are.
I know what you want to do.
Can I ask a question to David as someone who was living in England?
You were probably living in England at the height of what was known, at least in the States, as cool Britannia.
This is true.
Absolutely.
Because of all the hot artists coming out of the Saatchi Gallery and associated scenes.
Damien Hirst, but also Blur, and also Tony Blair?
Oh, maybe not.
One of the coolest third-way leaders we've ever had.
Yeah, exactly.
Are these monkeys' vitrines that they're kept in,
is that a reference to Damien Hirst's vitrines
where he would cut sheep in half and put sharks in formaldehyde?
I never thought of that, but that possibly, it does sort of feel like the kind of thing that i was wondering
if that was a little right uh it is funny how like in england you know the sort of young british
artists who you're referring to right now uh the ybas yes thes. So Damien Hirst and, you know, Tracy Emin and Angus Furst, you know, blah, blah, blah.
In the 90s, when I was a kid, it was like this thing in Britain of like, should we tolerate this?
Like, Britain was like, huh, everyone's excited that he put a shark in formaldehyde, but like, should he go to jail for this?
Like, is this good for Britain or bad?
should he go to jail for this?
Like,
is this good for Britain or bad?
You know,
like there's this kind of constant boring debate of like,
should government money sponsor such nonsense?
Uh,
which,
uh,
culminated in one of the Turner prize winners,
which I remember very well. And I did attend was just,
uh,
the Turner prize being Britain's like number one,
uh,
art prize was just lights turning on and off in a room.
And it's by Martin Creed.
It's called The Lights Going On and Off.
And it was one of those things where like sort of buddy-duddy Brit, you know, newspaper columnists were like,
Well, we've gone to, we can't just be turning lights on and off and calling this art.
Like, this is outrageous.
Tracy Eman or Eman or however you say her her name wasn't her piece just like her bed just like a crappy bed in the corner
of a gallery it is very very cool i have seen it it's called my bed uh it was exhibited it's such
a good name for a work of art uh and it is indeed her bed it was i think a turner nominee it didn't
win uh and it's like a disheveled bed. But it has like, you know, condoms and underwear, you know, like it's this very like raw and
kind of confrontational piece.
Like that's one of those things where you're like, this is uncomplicated.
Of course, this is art.
Like this is, you know, provoking such a, you know, incredible, you know, reaction in
you.
The lights turning on and off, you know, you're kind of like, in you, the lights turning on and off, you know,
you're kind of like, well, the lights are turning on and off. I am thinking about this. I'm not sure.
I'm not sure to what extent I'm thinking about what, you know, anything more than is this art,
you know what I mean? But still is interesting. Um, I love all that stuff.
I was living in Boston when all that stuff was happening. And I once actually, I can't believe I did this, but I once took the bus from Boston to New York to go to the Gagosian Gallery
to see the Damien Hirst, his first big American show with the shark and the sheep and the dots.
And was that was the PPG's as part of that show? That was Damien Hirst, right?
No, that's Andre Serrano, Piss Christ. That that was the and that predated that was our own version
of that was the national endowment for the arts controversy because he had received an nea grant
and my former my home state of north carolina our former senator jesse helms was um
although a huge patron and supporter of avant-garde urine-based artwork actually kicked up a lot of dust about that.
I mean, I just remember like five months of the New York Post having a field day.
Just every day was a different front page story.
Oh, yeah.
That was like manna from heaven for the New York Post.
Like they probably gave them a grant to do it.
Yes.
for the New York Post.
Like, they probably gave him a grant to do it.
Yes.
There was, you know, the Holy Virgin Mary,
which was the painting.
Chris Ophelia or whatever his name is.
And that was a gift to Giuliani because Giuliani made a huge stink about that
when that show was up at the Brooklyn Museum.
Yes.
And then the other thing I should mention
if we're going to talk about all this
is that Tracey Emin actually lost to Steve McQueen, the British film director, who initially was like an avant-garde artist that Turner prized that year.
Steve McQueen, another really cool artist of the 90s, which, you know, his early stuff like Bear is really, really cool if anyone's seen Steve McQueen's Bear.
The whole thing, I went to school very close to the Tate Modern, which opened in
the late 90s. Well, it opened in
2000. It was a millennium project. They turned
this, you know, everyone probably knows it now. It's a big
museum. They turned this power
station into a modern art museum,
and it had this turbine hall. It has
this turbine hall that's this massive space that can
have these massive
art installations in it, and I would
just go all the time at like lunch
and just hang out in like fuck what's his name what's the guy who does the really big stuff i'll
think of his name richard sarah jeff coons no i'll come up with it uh not him although he's cool too
no he's not no is he not cool is he bad i can't remember what does he do again he's not. No, is he not cool? Is he bad? I can't remember. What does he do again? He does the big ass balloons.
The balloons?
Yeah.
Those things can go fuck themselves.
You guys are out on the balloons, but they're so shiny.
I mean, the balloons are amazing objects and the fabrication is incredible, but I think of Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst as just so profoundly cynical.
Yes.
cynical. Yes. It's like their entire career now
is to trick hedge fund managers
into thinking they have taste
while running off with their money. And it's just
like, there's so much. And they also don't even
make any of the artwork. Yeah, right. Just outsourcing
everything to, like, fabricators.
Yeah.
Ben gets it. Hell yeah.
The person
I'm trying to think of is
Ofer, sorry, Our eliasin uh if anyone
knows him he did something called the weather project in 2003 where he installed a giant sun
in the turbine hall and turned out the lights that looked incredible and you put a giant mirror
on the ceiling and you would walk around looking up and you could see yourself and you could sort
of like walk without running into anyone because you were looking at this mirror a thousand feet
in this it was so fucking cool it's like sunshine it's like the danny boyle movie sunshine yeah man
uh anyway so love love that love that time 28 days later definitely has that electric energy
right with a lot of danny boyle does. That kind of cool Britannia.
Right, yeah.
I mean, it's so much of what we've pulled up
in dossier quotes in all the movies we've heard so far
is that Danny Boyle thought British movies
needed to be cool.
That there was not an excitement
in the way you had in British music
and art in the film area,
and he wanted to bring that energy to it.
It's what is so baffling about the latter half of his career
for so many people, I think,
that he then takes this very sincere swerve,
and Millions, of course, being his follow-up to this,
being the one where people are like,
Danny Boyle didn't direct this.
What? This is like some cute kids movie.
Like, what? He didn't make this.
Like, Danny Boyle, Danny Boyle.
It must be another guy
um anyway uh so all right so there's the monkey the monkey gets out and then we cut to killian
murphy he's nude in bed very british opening i feel like where they're like this ain't hollywood
baby you're gonna see a soft penis wedding you know like yeah right you know like this is real
although i don't really understand what are the circumstances in which he was left naked in a hospital bed in a coma and then just kind of abandoned?
I read on a website about zombie movie tropes when they go through this movie one by one and identify everything in this movie that has happened in another movie.
And one thing on the website was a subtle detail that I didn't pick up on, even though
I've watched it so many times, which is that whoever left him in that hospital bed, well,
they didn't take the time to write an explanatory note or to put them in a smock or anything,
but they did close the blinds to his door so the zombies wouldn't be able to see him
because you see him opening blinds.
And they also locked him in the room and slipped the key under the door because remember he finds the key
to let himself out so they did take some precautions on his behalf but maybe they were pressed for time
also as to why he's naked his nurse was uh shirley henderson's character from train spying she wanted
to see what he was working with when he was passed out and then found it very disappointing continuity within the universe exactly yeah um but yeah so he wakes up uh and
there's this whole extended sequence of him wandering around central london uh and then the
first i feel like the first infected human he find he comes across as the priest right
and the priest is the first zombie who tries to kill him. Yes. But that image when he walks into the church and he just sees the ground strewn with bodies.
And because of the lo-fi nature of the cinematography.
What am I looking at?
Right, right.
It's this thing I love that like every image in this movie becomes a bit of an abstraction where you're fighting to understand what you're seeing.
where you're fighting to understand what you're seeing.
And it also makes it harder to identify who is infected at first and who is not
because you're never getting a clear look at anything.
Right, yeah, yeah.
The graffiti, the end is fucking nigh.
You like that?
Yeah.
I like whoever spray painted that was like,
fuck it, man.
Like, really, you know?
Like, I'm gonna do this but
who fucking cares this is my lasting legacy as being like yeah the flyers is the other thing i
just david already mentioned that but the creepy eeriness of the the the flyers papered all over
everything yeah i will say that he because he could have spent a little more time reading the
newspaper that he picks up and glances yeah he sort of picks it up and throws it out. Yeah. It's weird. He goes straight to
the funny pages and then, like, the movie
listings and then he throws it out. He's like, eh.
Yeah. Curtis really has it this week.
We'll have to
shout out Curtis. Will that kid's hat ever
fall off?
No, Riz, you're talking
about all the, like, conscious aversions in this
movie, right? You think about this being the
first Fast Zombies movie. You have the sequence. sequence he walks into the church he sees these dead bodies some of
them start moving you don't quite understand what's happening and because the zombies in this
movie aren't green-skinned they don't have like clear obvious rotting flesh wounds right uh and
the cinematography abstracts it so much that like the doors throwing open and
this priest walking in really fast for an audience member going in cold, you you wouldn't necessarily
think this was a zombie. Right. It feels like something's wrong with this guy. Right. He's
traumatized or he's or he's hysterical he's warning him away like get out of here right
but just the basic clip at which he's moving is going against the way we're wired to see
threats in these movies yeah totally at first blush uh and i love it i love it i love because
i you know it is such a classic zombie trope usually that the guy is coming at you slowly
right and you're kind of like hey hey man, are you okay? Hey, are you alright man?
And you're just like,
and this, he has to make the
instant decision to bean this guy
and then he's immediately
like, I shouldn't have done that. And then obviously
I love how quickly
the Catholic guilt kicks in.
Right, right, right.
And he
encounters Selena, who's played by naomi harris and mark
noah huntley not an actor i know that well who is he you know anyway uh and they go to
deptford which is in sort of you know whatever southeast london uh to see his family who died
by suicide essentially and left him a note being like know, we didn't want to wake you up, essentially.
Right.
That's such a heartbreaking thing
to have someone, like, walk into a room
and witness what would be
one of the most awful, unimaginable thing.
Right.
And everyone around him is going like,
you're really fucking lucky.
You're lucky that this is what you get to see.
Yeah, yeah.
And I'm such a sucker for these tropes.
Like, I love this sort of,
you know, the time shift, right?
Where he's like,
what are you talking about?
And Naomi Harris is like,
I've only been doing this for 28 days,
but I've completely transformed.
Right, like my personality is hardened
and like, you know,
I'm this kind of like spiky road warrior now.
What's also,
what's basically scary about the idea of having a coma, going into a coma for any reason.
Yes.
Is like, what if I wake up to an unrecognizable world?
And unrecognizable can mean anything.
Like, you know, my parents got divorced.
I don't recognize this world I'm waking up into.
And then this is just such an extreme shift of every single norm he knew and believed
and that everyone has adjusted to this world so quickly
that the basic tenets of humanity have shifted.
But Mark getting the wound, right?
And how quickly,
where we're so used to in zombie movies when someone reveals
that they're infected or someone is hiding that they're infected and it's found out
there's this belabored scene of people being in conflict with their own emotions can i do it right
and sometimes the infection you know it lasts over the course of hours or days and you watch
and it usually happens much late so yeah let me about him
i just want to keep track of the of the tropes that are being subverted here if i can backtrack
the one thing that him being in a coma and waking up to an empty london denies us is what is always
my favorite moment in a zombie movie which is the slow realization that something's not quite right
like what are all those ambulance sirens which has happens in world war z which is
also a very much a 9-11 new york response yeah yeah like why is that person why is that old lady
beating the shit out of that other person with a cane and eating their head like that can't be
normal we kind of are dropped down into the middle of it like all that action has already taken place
and is over with and then with mark getting infected which is jim's
fault right i mean we know that he just woke up but he shouldn't have lit a candle in his house
because that's what leads the zombies to bust through there's two there's two subversives at
once which i think are really exciting one is that you turn instantly like there's no waiting around
to see what happens the second is that she kills him instantly.
It's genuinely shocking.
That's the big thing.
Usually in zombie movies,
a beloved member of your team... I'm sorry.
There's that, but also usually
if one of the good guys is bitten,
it happens like two-thirds of the way through the movie,
which happens in this case with Frank, obviously,
who's the much more important character than Mark,
but still, watching this for the first time, he gets bit, and she just immediately chops him with a machete like one fell swoop.
It's like, oh, my gosh, this is like really exciting.
The stakes are really high.
This is not going to be like a regular zombie movie.
And speaking to the like, are we the real monsters thing for Jim?
That's terrifying.
Yeah, he's freaked out.
Yeah, right.
And that she's desensitized to it, that it's just like, well, I know what needs to be done.
Let me grab my axe.
Let me hack him to bits.
I wonder if the machete, again, this is just, this is where my head was at after reading
the Samantha Power book about genocide, which focuses a lot on the Rwandan genocide.
And the insane thing about that genocide, which is that between 500 and 800,000 Rwandans
were killed by their neighbors by hand, just with machetes.
And the machete is a really iconic association for that particular genocide.
You know, every genocide has its own mechanics, its own techniques of death and erasure.
And I wonder if that was a specific choice to give her.
I mean, machetes are also just very tough, and I know they're cool like samurai swords.
But I was wondering if using a machete was a reference to the Rwandan genocide.
Because again, because where my head was at when I watched this movie, I was like, boom, Rwandan genocide movie reference.
Like, this movie is going to be insane.
You know, like, Henry Kissinger is going to show up and get his head blown off.
This is going to be the best movie ever made like i was so proud that was the end of this
film yeah i i'm trying to remember exactly how they get there so you guys might not know so
brendan gleason's character frank and his uh daughter hannah they're living in balfron tower
which do you guys know what balfron tower is that's not the one that burned is it no it is
not okay no no that's a very bad building a very poorly designed building balfron Tower is. That's not the one that burned, is it? No, it is not. That's a very bad building.
A very poorly designed building. Balfron Tower
is like one of the most famous, brutalist pieces
of architecture in the world.
It's a listed
building in Britain. It's like
you know, protected because
it's so special. If you guys look it up, it's a very
cool looking building, but obviously
because it was brutalist architecture,
it was sort of frowned upon at the time. It's so striking and it looks like this spaceship that fucking landed
you know just like like you know just it'll plummeted down to london uh and uh you guys
it was designed by a very famous architect called erno goldfinger who uh i Ian Fleming hated so much no so much that he named Goldfinger the villain
after him hated him so much he did the biggest favor possible immortalized him he made it I mean
I I will Ian Fleming was also probably thinking like I mean that guy's got a pretty good last
name Goldfinger does kind of roll off the tongue um but anyway so but yeah how do they get there how
do they encounter them i don't know they have like the lights they have christmas lights that
are twinkling and they go there and then they're and they find that they've been barricaded by
shopping carts right uh which is very ad busters and uh then they go up and they get chased they
get chased up the stairs and hannah is reluctant to let them in. And, uh,
and then she relents when Frank gives her permission. He says,
no,
we can trust these guys to let them.
Can I say one thing about this opening sequence?
Anything.
This kind of bothers me.
The thing to keep in mind,
and this becomes especially relevant once they reach the military compound is,
and I feel so crass saying this,
but it's kind of like,
guys,
it's only been 28 days.
Like you really have nothing to eat, but soda pop. Like it hasn't even been a month. There's a weird kind of like time
accordion thing where in some ways it feels much longer than 28 days, you know? Well, that's like
what happened to me when lockdown started. And I was like, oh boy, I really don't shop well.
Well, that's like what happened to me when lockdown started.
And I was like, oh boy, I really don't shop well.
Two days in, you just have nothing but soda and Snickers.
My fridge is only different holiday Reese's shapes.
Right.
Yeah.
All right.
Maybe it was maybe bad planning.
They're caught off guard.
These guys are caught off guard.
I mean, Frank is a cab driver. I do like that because it's sort of like a magic London thing of like,
he has a kind of a robust vehicle and also he knows.
He has the knowledge.
Every street.
He has the knowledge,
uh,
which is what,
uh,
London cabbies have to learn.
It's called the knowledge.
Uh,
do you know that Griffin?
I love,
I love dropping my English.
If you want to be a black cab driver in England,
you have to do something called the knowledge,
which is you basically drive around London streets for like two years because London has no geography that makes any sense.
Yeah, I forgot that the knowledge was the term.
I do know about this because it's constantly invoked as the thing that New York cab drivers are not required to do.
Because obviously New York's geography is simpler, but like the, it is crazy in London where you're getting,
you know,
I lived on Burley road and I would get in,
I'd be like,
I'm going to Burley road.
And they'd be like,
which Burley road.
And I'd be like,
NW five.
That was my zip code.
And they postcode and they'd be like,
Oh yeah.
You know?
And it's just like,
there's 1 million streets in London.
There's no like arteries or no grids or anything.
It's just like,
yeah,
sure.
Yeah.
I know how to get there.
They just need to know it all. Like the back of their hand uh isn't it wild it's not like uh brennan gleason
is young in this movie uh he's obviously already in dad mode uh it it is now uh he's probably in
his 40s yeah like yeah yeah it's odd to see him on screen now without a single fleck of white
in his beard or hair.
Like, I feel like, I mean, he's just,
Brendan Gleeson looks incredible always,
and all the different phases of Brendan Gleeson
are incredible.
But, like, his weird elder statesman phase now,
where, like, the contrast between, like,
the hyper-bright orange
and then the white and gray
in his beard and his hair is so fascinating.
And this, you're just like,
oh, you're just like
perfectly ginger.
He's a lovely ginger man.
Is he the guy who's in
Banshees of Inishirin?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
His first Oscar nomination.
Long overdue.
I can't see that movie
because literally
one of my other
recurring nightmares
is that all my friends
secretly hate me.
And my understanding is
that's the plot of the movie
and it's like
Oh, you will hate this movie.
A little bit.
Yeah.
A little bit.
I can't see that.
What if your friend
one day was like
Literally had that dream
last night
now that I remember it.
Right.
Yeah.
Has Brendan Gleeson
been reading your
dream journal reads
and like fucking
one by one?
Your other dream
is being stuck in prison
with a nice bear
who forces you
to make marmalade?
Yeah.
He stars in every movie
about my nightmares.
Yeah.
I'm going to sue him.
He's also, of course,
in AI,
artificial intelligence.
What?
He's at the Flesh Fair.
Remember, he's the Flesh Fair guy.
Oh, yeah.
Do not be,
you know,
confused.
This is a robot.
Oh, my God.
I need to keep my distance
from this guy.
Yeah. Yeah.
Thank God his acting will not be passed
on through errors that I might stumble upon
in TV and movies.
He's got many, many errors,
of course. I have even worse news
for you. What? You're forgetting
that he played the figure of your all-time
greatest nightmare.
Donald J. Trump.
He did. In what?
In The Comey rule on showtime you know how they're now making a movie they're making a movie or is it a showtime series or
something about prince andrew blowing the fucking jeffrey epstein interview, right? Yes. Like, that's what the movie's about. It's just about when Prince Andrew
shat the bed on TV,
like, two years ago.
Like, I think we need to stop it
with the, like,
we're going to make a movie
just about, you know,
Trump firing James Comey.
But that speaks to our conversation earlier
about the difference between movies
that are literally earlier about the distance the difference between movies that
that are literally just about the news yes versus movies that sort of anticipate deeper trends or
you know some get that sort of gestalt tectonic gestalt stuff right yeah
like when the comey rule came out and no one watched it that doesn't look anything like
that's crazy it is so funny that they're like i don't know middle-aged
actor put the wig on him get it i'm gonna spray tan job done sims i'll remind you i called it in
a fucking episode like 2016 2017 you said he could do trump we were talking about is there any actor
who you could actually cast to dramatically play trump, not as a parody, who would work? And I said,
I think Gleason is probably
the closest. That's an insane image.
Have you seen The Comey
Rule? I've seen clips.
His performance seems okay, but
like everyone else on the planet,
I went, why the fuck would I want to watch
this? I don't need
to hear this retold
in a fake style, stretched over too many hours
yeah he's you know like any esteem obviously he's irish he's not british but you know like any
esteemed actor from that part of the world he's played fucking winston churchill right yeah point
you know he's played a couple of famous irish people he played roddy doyle he played michael
collins he played uh in a really good movie the general he played martin cahill the
very famous knuckles mcginty dublin monster played knuckles mcginty that irish hero damien hearst
so it is like i feel like at this point he's in that like you know in the early 90s he's in like
braveheart michael collins uh the general like in these like interesting Irish movies
the butcher boy he's really you know he's
he's pops in that as well and that
he had just shifted to the sort of like okay
Hollywood likes this guy
as a sort of 20 minutes
yeah direct you know Mission Impossible
to AI
Gangs of New York you know things like that
Cold Mountain right like that's where that's where he's
at right so good in Gangs of New York he's incredible, things like that. Cold Mountain, right? Like, that's where he's at right now. So good in Gangs of New York.
He's incredible.
That's the moment where I remember being like,
who the fuck is this guy?
Like him in this movie,
I think he's a really warm presence.
He's a good counterpoint to Naomi Harris
because she's so, like, flinty and intense.
Right.
He's a little more regular.
You know, like, you kind of need him.
You need the sort of like,
okay, can we calm down for a second?
Like let's have some, you know, this movie is so stressful.
Like, yes.
Love a creme de menthe.
Yes.
Yeah.
His mere energy needs to shift her entire worldview.
I mean, you have that scene where Naomi Harris says like, he made me believe there is a thing worth fighting for again just because he
is able to maintain some sense of I don't know I don't want to say enjoyment in life but he's
finding value in life and still being alive and in his relationship with his daughter and it's like
there are no big showy scenes where he has to like sell that it's just basically in the essence of this
man but i do feel like david in your zombie trope uh list the sort of lovable guy turning and being
like get away from me get away from me like that that's that's big on the tropes right yeah and
this is one of the better examples of it this i've that whole sequence is really affecting it's so
affecting yeah it's really i i Yeah. It's really nasty.
I just remember
the entire audience gasping
when the blood goes
into his eye.
Yeah, it's that.
It's that.
It's like, oh, God, no.
We like this guy.
We're like, I figured,
but ah, God damn it.
And it's like,
it's such a,
he couldn't have done
anything differently.
Well, he could have
worked some safety goggles.
They all could have, frankly.
You know what?
You know what?
Fair enough.
But that gets back to our armor point.
But it's like,
it's not like he failed to recognize
a guy lurking behind him.
Right, yeah.
No, it's tragic.
It's a nice,
it's really well done,
and it's, yeah.
And the aesthetic is cool again,
this sort of weird shipping,
deserted shipping container place, right?
Like, it's also kind of creepy.
And, like, urban apocalypse vibes, you know.
The supermarket sequence is so good, too, because it's, like, the first time where they make the collapse of society feel a little bit fun.
Huge trope in zombie movies,
the shopping spree.
Sometimes it happens at the mall.
If it's Dawn of the Dead,
it happens at the mall.
Is that when the granddaddy song is playing?
They're like,
da, da, da, da, da, da.
Yeah.
Yeah, I love that song.
You got that shot of him
with the Granny Smith apples.
Irradiated, he says.
That's something I would really enjoy doing
in the apocalypse.
Shopping?
Yeah.
Have you not thought of that, guys?
Yeah, like going to the mall
and getting all of the clothes you've ever wanted to have.
You can do that now, Ben.
They don't pursue shoplifters.
It's part of their loss.
There is no loss prevention strategy anymore.
You don't have to wait for the apocalypse.
Walgreens and every single item is behind glass and needs six.
Next time they make a zombie movie and someone goes to loot the store and everything is locked up, like even the toothpaste.
That's amazing.
That's funny.
Yes.
No, I have a feeling I would get arrested.
I don't know if that I know.
I know what you're you're alluding to. I have a feeling I would get arrested. I don't know if that... I know what you're alluding to.
I have a feeling I would get arrested.
You'd be the one.
You would get arrested even in the zombie apocalypse.
Zombie apocalypse.
You'd be like, all right, this is for me.
And there's like the one last mall cop who's like,
look, I don't have any purpose in this world.
It's like that movie, The Postman.
It's like a post-apocalyptic world,
but the guy still is going to deliver the mail to bring society back.
It could be like,
right.
Kevin Costner is the security guard.
Can we talk about them driving straight into a tunnel against Jim's
suggestion?
Yes.
Frank with his cabbie knowledge still thinks that's a good idea,
but it is one of the better sequences of the movie.
It looks crazy.
Yeah.
Oh,
you think like, yeah, it's great. The whole sequence is the movie. It looks crazy. Yeah. Don't you think?
Yeah, it's great.
The whole sequence is so good.
It's so tense with the rats and then deciding to just lift the car instead of using the jack.
And tire changing is always stressful to me.
So this is just like the ultimate trigger event.
But you know what's interesting?
So the very famous musical theme that comes in the climax of the movie when Jim's going buck wild and killing everybody, which is, I read, the composer for the film basically made a Godspeed You Black Emperor sound alike because they couldn't get any more music out of that band of principled Canadians.
going to get any more music out of that band of principled Canadians. So he created that like incredibly layered, um, menacing, like what people consider the theme to 28 days later.
I, it only plays once in the movie. I remembered it being played through any zombie action sequence
because it's just so distinctive that I associate it with the entire movie. But when they're lifting
up the Jack or they're lifting up the car in the tunnel, that musical, the score for that is much more abstract.
Yeah. With just like squealing guitars and feedback. It was not what I remembered it as
being, which is the famous piece of music. But I also think because that piece of music
is reused in a lot of other places. It reused in the opening of 28 weeks later yeah when they're chasing him to the boat which is it's much like john murphy's
sunshine theme that's now just like omnipresent right yes um but i mean you know music is so
pivotal to every single movie from danny boy we've covered so far right like it is it is his biggest
you know,
ace in the hole or whatever is that he just seems to always know what's going to be like new and
resonant and kind of different, right? Like, you know, he's going to find music that works for the
movie, but it's also like the kind of music you don't really hear in movies. Like, this is going
to shock you. Um, he's so clever. they go yeah so they go to manchester brandon
gleason dies he is shot to death by the military because christopher eccleston major henry west
uh has set up some kind of fortified mansion and he's like broadcasting to survivors but it's all
a ruse because as you have mentioned david they really just want to like lure women
into sexual slavery to like repopulate the world because they've all gone completely fucking crazy
and again it's been 28 days like yeah but it's but it's there the you know not to speak ill of
our armed servicemen obviously or whatever but there is that kind of like authority streak that's
frightening you know like what if that was completely unencumbered
and all of a sudden like the guy with the gun
gets to make all the rules, you know, all that stuff.
Especially in England where people don't have guns
like in the same way.
He's the real anti-Brennan Gleeson though.
It's like Brennan Gleeson is like not lost
any of his humanity.
And this guy was like, chips are down.
Now I get cooking.
I got bad vibes.
I make everyone feel uncomfortable.
The slow burn and the slow revelation of what they're actually up to
is really effective because there's that scene where Jim is taking,
he's taking a shower and he looks out the window.
Remember there's that cook character.
There's the army cook, Jones, who is,
you see him literally wearing a pink apron,
like the most gendered thing you can
imagine. And then Jim looks out the window and the soldiers are like doing donuts in a Jeep,
teasing the Jones who's coded as the woman of the group because he works in the kitchen and
serves them food and stuff, right? There's all these little hints that like something is awry.
That stuff is like really good and creepy. That actor's name is Leo Bill and stuff, right? There's all these little hints that like something is awry. That stuff is like really good and creepy.
That actor,
his name is Leo Bill
and Griffin,
you may recognize him
from Tim Burton's
Alice in Wonderland.
He's kind of like a classic
chinless wonder.
Yeah, this sort of like
English guy
who just kind of looks like
he came out of a
Charles Dickens illustration
where he's like,
ew, I don't know.
Of course,
at the beginning of
Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland
where he is presented as her prospective husband and she goes, this is the worst fate imaginable.
I must run away and find something else.
And ironically ends up in an even worse fate.
Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.
Right.
Having lunch with Johnny Depp.
Should have stuck with Leo Bill.
Not so bad anymore.
But I like that actor. Uh, so I feel like obviously
David, you referenced what I feel like is sort of the commonly held opinion on sunshine, which is
like, eh, that movie kind of goes insane right at the end. I also feel like that was true for this
movie less so, but I do feel like the general buzz on this movie was like, it is outrageous.
It is so good. It's so scary. And the final act kind of lost me and it's like i'll tell
you why the final act lost you because it is so profoundly disturbing yeah in a in another way
big ass like not in the high octane like we're running away from a zombie thing right but in
this kind of like you're like oh jesus like okay that is plausible that is unsettling as an audience member
right there's less distancing
you're not like
you don't walk out of the theater
thinking well thank god there aren't zombies
I don't have to deal with this on a day to day basis
like the Eccleston act
you're just like oh right humanity is
pretty fucking awful
right yeah
nothing I can do about that.
Right.
And there's this specific thing
of the one zombie soldier
that they've chained up
and they're just like
sort of being like,
let's see what happens.
They're doing observation on him.
He says he's telling me
he's futureless.
Which, yeah,
when he's vomiting,
when the zombie is vomiting,
there's something like
weirdly visceral about that.
So when they do that,
what do you call that filming technique?
Where they, is that,
it's that thing where you have every,
it's like every other frame,
but each frame is held twice as long.
You know, it's kind of that strobing effect
that he uses for the zombie attacks.
Yeah, so the strobing.
Right.
Right.
I don't, yeah, I don't know what you would call it.
I believe that is,
it's all, it's frame rate play.
It's filming a different frame rate and projecting it at 24.
Right, yeah.
And I'm just, my brain isn't working right now,
and I can't remember if that effect is filming more frames or less frames.
But it makes the zombie stuff really, really come alive,
and he uses it really well in the moment that we'll get to in a minute,
which was when Jim is about to begin his rampage.
And he starts cranking the perimeter alarm, which freaks everybody out within the manor.
And that's the first time that you see Jim shot at that frame rate because now he's in zombie mode, right?
Right.
So Boyle starts shooting him the same way.
And that's why that whole sequence is so intense because of the way it's strobing
yeah you know
it's uh it's good
nasty stuff I think Eccleston is really well
deployed because he
is such a familiar face and he's
obviously someone who's worked with Boyle before
but he's so good at playing
that kind of knife edge character
where you're like am I you know should I trust
this guy and like he can kind of take it to a point
and then you're like,
oh no, he's really frightening.
Well, and his face looks like a knife.
Yeah, he's just,
the angular face,
he's got that kind of Roman nose,
he's got a big beak,
which I love.
I love him.
I love him as an actor.
I love what,
he's always been like kind of an outspoken
interesting guy. Like I dig.
Yeah. He's really good.
Is this his last
spoil movie? I guess it is. Yeah.
He doesn't do a lot of movies.
No. Like he really
does a lot of television.
Yeah. I don't
know. Yeah. I don't know. Do you like Eccleston
in this? you'll appreciate
this david the the epigraph to this chris hedges book war is a force that gives us meaning is the
final stanza from wilford owens dolce decorum est which is one of his legendary world war one poems
which is a really powerful poem like it's extremely moving and it speaks to chris hedge's thesis and also the
thesis of this movie i think which is like oh you think all this fighting and war making is fun like
this will this will be your downfall like on a spiritual level all it does is destroy people
but anyway i wanted to i wanted to listen to some people reading dulce de cora mast and uh one of the
first youtube hits is eccleston doing a reading
of it and it's pretty good that's cool yeah uh did you see benediction this year uh or last year
no what's that i did terrence davis film i you guys should both see it it's really good it's a
biopic it's more about sigfried sassou and wilford owen is also in it but it's a great
terrence davis movie about uh you know, the World War I poets.
Oh, really?
You know,
that whole scene.
Yeah, yeah.
Siegfried Sassoon was
at least bisexual
or, you know,
he had gay relationships
mostly about that.
Wilfred Owens,
amazing person,
a fascinating person.
Yeah.
And a really good poet.
Do you know what's wild, David?
I'm looking at
Christopher Eccleston's IMDb.
Not only you're saying like,
oh, this is his last Bollywood movie. He doesn't do a lot
of movies. After 20
days later, he doesn't make another movie for
five years. Right. Yeah.
And he does Doctor Who in between.
He does Heroes. Right. He does Doctor Who, which is
obviously very involved. Right. Yeah.
But he does not do a movie between 28 days
later and Notorious Y.A. flop
The Seeker, The Dark is flop the seeker the dark is rising
remember when the dark was rising and then it's like right he has this run of like intermittently
like playing destro and gi joe playing malachi for the dark world he would pop up in these
no offense kind of low rent you know blockbuster movies the least interesting villain parts and
and and then he would give these
interviews where he was like, I hated making that.
It's so awful. And they're like
years apart from each other.
Yeah.
But obviously he's so
incredible in
The Leftovers, more recently.
I love his part
in that television show. And now
he's doing the fourth season of True Detective
which I know very little about but he is
in it. The fourth season?
Yes.
Do you remember? Jodie Foster.
Yeah, my friend wrote on that. I'm excited
for it. Jodie Foster and
John Hawks is in it.
I think they filmed it in like Iceland. I don't know.
I'm always down for that.
It might even be like Antarctic. It might be set at the North Pole. I think it's something it in like Iceland. I don't know. I'm always down for that. It might even be like Antarctic.
It might be set at the North Pole.
I think it's something really crazy like that.
Great.
I love that show.
Don't quote me on that,
but I think that's true.
I hope it's about Santa crimes.
That would be cool if like Santa's like,
so an elf is dead and we don't know why
and it goes all the way to the top.
It goes all the way to Claus.
And he's like,
stop asking questions.
Yeah. I brought you in here to tidy this up. And's like i'm gonna bring the whole system down mr toy man uh anyway what happens in this sequence of i mean it's really just the eventual thing is
that he lets the chained up zombie go which anyone can predict that's gonna happen right what happens
is west reveals to Jim
that he is going to let the soldiers rape Selena and Hannah.
He's like, get in on this with me.
You know, are you, you want to do it?
Like, right, he's sort of offering him.
Jim tries to stop it.
Jim and Farrell, who is the one soldier
who sympathizes with our protagonist.
Stuart McQuarrie, who's the actor.
Who believes that the rest of the world is going on as normal, and this is like bullshit,
that England's been quarantined, but the rest of the world is fine, so you guys are jumping
the gun in terms of repopulating the earth by raping these women.
Meanwhile, Major West is making the thesis of the movie, which is, I think it's just
another day at the office.
All I see is people killing each other
and we've been doing that forever.
So there's no difference.
So Farrell and Jim are taken out into the woods
to be shot by Mitch, who's like the head bad guy,
this really sadistic, thuggish actor.
And Jones, who is the chef who was wearing the pink apron,
but has now killed because there was a zombie invasion and
all the landmines went off and jones shot one of the invading zombies so now he feels like he's
more of a man things go awry and then jim escapes after feral is killed uh the soldiers return to
the the compound to brideshead revisited and then jim sounds the alarm and then we go into ass kicking
mode yeah death death mode yeah right west's death where he gets like smashed through the car
and you know pulled out the window right is a particularly you know visceral thing but jim
shoots off the chains that are restraining the soldier who is already zombified and this is like
one of the things that's kind of like morally complicated and fucked up.
And what makes the sequence so exciting is it's not just that Jim himself as a human decides to wreak vengeance on all these people.
He enlists the chaotic energy of a fucking zombie to help him just eradicate these people, right?
help him just eradicate these people right he's just he's just picking them off one by one in this sequence which is all scored by this one piece of music that plays on there's no cuts in
the music for this whole sequence is six minutes and the music builds it's a six minute crescendo
until the moment that selena almost kills jim it's like pretty incredible use of music to set
mood and tension and stuff um Yeah, it's sort of a
cool sort of sub zombie trope.
The Michonne character in The Walking Dead
has the thing where she's
she has two zombies that she walks around
with. Yeah, like I do
you know, the more
that was the whole thing with things like The Walking Dead, the
deeper you get where it's like, well, we got to keep coming up
with stuff. The more you sort of like see those
kinds of tropes like getting messed around with.
Yeah.
Um,
but I do,
I do.
Yeah.
It turns my stomach.
The whole,
do you,
you know,
just put this guy down or do you let him run wild,
uh,
and kill everybody.
Um,
and the sound design in this sequence is also really good because it's an
empty under furnished house with high ceilings and just like seven people
screaming and running from room to room with a lot
of like room echo and stuff.
It's really, really well done. The sound
design is really good in this whole sequence.
This whole movie. Did you guys
so David, you saw it in the theater. Griff, did you
see this movie in the theater? Oh yeah.
Yeah, you did. Okay, okay.
I remember it being rattling in the theater.
Yes, yes. And it was like, look, I still enjoyed re-watching this movie, but watching this movie on a small screen at home has a very different effect than watching it up on a big screen in a room with a lot of people.
Being walked with it. Right.
Yeah, just because of the muddiness of of the images and everything it's a lot more
alarming when they're so large right yeah yeah you know i i and and just the the silence in in
those moments where the music does drop out uh becomes so much more alarming um they've been
playing it a lot at ifFC here in New York City
as like a midnight movie.
And I missed it last weekend
it was playing. But yes, no, I saw
this in theater. This was, I mean, this came out right
at the point where I was starting to get
really into zombie
movies. So this kind of came out
at like a perfect point for me
in the bell curve. Yeah.
Yeah, that's interesting uh sunshine
is similar where like i love that movie i've seen it like 10 10 12 times whoa yeah but uh i'd love
that movie it's really one of my favorite movies uh same same same same century whatever yeah um
but in a theater the sound design in that movie Is so impressive And special
And I'd love to see it in a theater again
Maybe we will who knows
So that's basically it
We 28 days later again
We cut to black
And then there's this sort of happy ending
In Cumbria in Northern England
The infected are dying off
They're starving
And they Are sort of spotted by a fighter jet
and they spell out hello, right?
It's sort of this surprisingly light ending.
It's nice.
This is shot on 35 millimeter, right?
Like this, just the end sequence is on film.
Yeah.
They shot it later, I think.
Yes.
Because someone wasn't available.
Alwyn Cookler, who is a wonderful cinematographer who works with Boyle on Sunshine and Steve Jobs and a lot of other cool movies, but he was Lynn Ramsey's cinematographer.
He shot it with him.
So let me ask you a question about this ending.
And I know that there are alternate endings that are much darker and keep things on a bleak.
Yeah, I don't like the alternate ending so much is this ending supposed because this ending in a way for two reasons i find incredibly ironic
and it reminds me of the irony in in dawn of the dead which is that the big thing that made that
movie so legendary in in addition to establishing the iconography of the of the shuff of the
shuffling slow slow-moving zombie
is the idea that like,
look at these dumb zombies came back to the mall
because it's all they know
because they're brain dead,
just like all you people who like buying shoes.
But then there's an ironic moment in that movie
where the protagonists,
who were supposed to be so much smarter than the zombies,
also go crazy in the mall and go shop,
have their Ben's fantasy of a shopping spree.
Right.
Now, in this movie, we find that the real enemies to humanity are not these poor zombies who are infected with a virus that's outside their control, but these military guys who want to rape women in order to start repopulating the world and have something to live for.
They want a playhouse in their huge empty manor in the middle of a field that's surrounded
by landmines and tripwires.
Right.
And that's obviously absurd and evil and awful.
We have two characters, Jim and Hannah, who were both the only children of two parent
households.
And by the end of the movie, both of those,
all their parents are dead.
We don't know much about Selena's family.
But in the final image
of this movie,
we have recreated
the nuclear family
with Jim, Selena, and Hannah, right?
Jim and Hannah,
or Jim and Selena now
are kind of the parental proxies
for the much younger Hannah.
And we see through
the back half of the movie,
the final third of the movie,
Selena looking out for Hannah and feeding her Valium so that she can disassociate while the soldiers are, you know, do their thing. Not only that, not only have
they recreated the nuclear family as a symbol of like the future and hope of humanity, then they
also get excited when a military fighter jet flies over have you learned nothing about the nature of the military like and and that's fine like it is it's a it's an as far as happy endings go it's
good enough but i wonder if we're part of us is supposed to be like now hold on a minute
what happened the last time you put your faith in these military bigwigs right
what is interesting to me i had not seen this film since seeing it in theaters, and I remembered the ending just being the truck crashing.
I remembered it having the most bleak, oblique ending of just the truck crashes and they go through the windshield and the movie's over and it's unresolved.
I had completely forgotten this ending.
Oh, interesting.
I don't know if I had seen the alternate endings, which I watched for this.
This ending, the theatrical ending, or the one we're talking about,
is the one that feels...
It's the one thing in this movie that does feel like
what we were complimenting this movie for not doing to a degree.
It does feel like
this is the one part of the movie that is actually in reaction to what's going on in the culture
i think you're right reese that it feels like this ending sells out the rest of the movie a
little bit and goes against a little bit and feels a little more like the the kind of earnest late
period the denny bull you were talking about sims but I also think it was just like, at the point this movie's coming
out, people need some optimism.
Right? Yeah.
I think it's a little bit that, but I will say, I think
this speaks to two things. One,
all British people want to do is fucking
move to the countryside and hang up their laundry.
They're obsessed with hanging up their laundry.
It's like, you know, paradise to them
is not owning a dryer and just hanging up
laundry every single hour of the day.
Yeah.
Like, British people would say to me, like, oh, but dryers, those things are no good.
And I was like, what are you talking?
Put the clothes in them.
The clothes get dry.
It's great.
Modern miracle.
Maybe the best invention of all time.
They're like, no, no, no.
What you need to do is put them out in real damp weather.
You know, because, like, out here, you know, it's constantly wet.
So I want to put them out
what the hell are you talking about uh the other thing is the thing you referenced david which is
that that uniquely british thing of like you know we're on this island we're kind of not part of
anything like which sort of can sometimes fuel that sort of euroskepticism that sort of reached
fever pitch a few years ago, but also
like it's part of our whole like, you know,
you know, imperial past,
but like just that idea of like, what if
Britain was this like escape from New York style
like quarantine zone where it's like,
yeah, some bad shit went down
over there. Luckily, we could lock
it down because, you know,
it's an island, right? Like,
and like it sort of speaks to that like
jets are flying over being like so how are things doing down there which i do kind of love right
yeah uh which obviously the sequel gets into and i think that's that's smart like you know that is
the direction to take it in like what if england was just a giant quarantine zone the sequel is
the one that ends with the shot of the zombies running
through the channel right Eiffel Tower
yeah oh I thought it was the Eiffel Tower well they come out
of the they do run through the channel
come out and you see the Eiffel Tower yeah that's a great
ending yes I mean they're so
predictable right they
go right to the Eiffel Tower I know right
these fucking tourists
god you know they don't even want to
go to the whatever,
blood of the blind.
Anyway.
I want to hear David Sims list
third tier tourist attractions
in Paris.
The zombies are too...
The Rodin Museum.
Okay.
Let's keep going.
Jim Morrison's grave.
They don't go straight to
Jim Morrison's grave.
The Lizard King.
Yeah.
I have done that
multiple times.
I have gone to, know pair of liches
are you a fan of the doors david david no i'm not um i i think that first record
you know has its place like you know the debut album with oh Dumpster Oh Kabam
I like you know like break on through
To the other side okay you know especially
If it's two and a half minutes long and not
You know 40 minutes long
Like
But no I'm not really a Doors guy
Never really
I feel like you had to be there with Jim Morrison right
A little bit and maybe not even then
Maybe not And I also think that like that I feel like you had to be there with Jim Morrison, right? A little bit. And maybe not even then.
And I also think that like,
that is maybe like the most annoying biopic ever made.
Like,
right.
Like,
is that,
that is,
that's like the tropiest,
silliest.
Oh,
when he's wearing leather pants and a shirt and posed as a crucified Christ figure for like an hour.
Like,
you're just like,
shut up.
Jesus Christ.
I thought you were 27 when you died.
How long is this going on for?
Oh, are you talking about the movie about the doors?
I'm talking about the movie.
I thought you were talking about that famous photo of him.
I'm sorry.
Well, the photo's alright.
He was a handsome man.
It takes two hours off of the movie.
Yeah.
Anyway, let's play the box office game.
If there's anything else you guys want to say,
because we should wrap up.
The movie was well-received, I would say.
Right? You know, got pretty good reviews.
Critics pick
in the New York Times.
That's not nothing.
It was a crossover hit, especially for
such a low budget. It was a deeply, deeply
profitable movie that got boiled back onto people's...
It got them back in the conversation.
It was made for about 5 million pounds
and grossed 45 domestic
and another 40 worldwide, internationally.
It doesn't seem crazy or anything,
but it was just like...
It was a movie in America that never
Opened beyond like 1200 theaters
Like you know it never went super wide
No it was like
Very successful kind of programming
In the middle of the summer yeah
Right and in fact Griffin
June 27th 2003
It's opening number 4
But what's opening number 1
It's new this week it's a silly high octane sequel
Based on a television show
Charlie's Angels Full Throttle?
Yes
The kind of movie
That is like kind of diametric
We don't make them anymore
Yeah we don't make them that way anymore
Like one of the glossiest movies ever
Reserved to kind of austere
Right Every shot in that movie like one of the glossiest movies reserved to kind of a steer right
every shot in that movie
feels like
you know McG was just kind of like
well they're walking down the hallway boring
how do we make that crazy
even the most
transitional establishment
it just all has to be completely wild
yeah I think the original
working title of that film
was Charlie's Angels Vivo Official
because it just feels like a series of music videos
stacked in order.
But yes, yes, no.
It's one of the most movies ever made.
David, I'm assuming you have not seen
Charlie's Angels Full Throttle.
It is the only movie I've seen more times than 28 days later i've
seen it seven times and i've seen all the alternate endings and i think if if you read it in the
context of chris hedge's masterpiece war is a force that gives us meaning you're going to find
a lot of interesting subtext in that movie and samantha power is in it of course it was uh you
know our current Yeah, okay
So Charlie's Angels Full Throttle
Opening to an underwhelming $37 million
That movie was a bit of a disappointment
Yes
Yes, especially a hugely inflated budget
Right, and the first movie had done surprisingly well
Now the reason this box office game is very interesting, Griffin
Is that number two
Is a film that was number one last week
But has plummeted 70% since its opening weekend.
I believe this is one of my favorite movies ever covered on the podcast.
It's an infamous second weekend drop.
I believe this is Ang Lee's Hulk.
Yes, the worst drop in the history of like blockbusters, basically.
At that point in time.
Audiences were like, no, thank you.
We didn't enjoy this and we
told everyone not to see it is that good i've heard that's really good yes it is it's fantastic
i heard it's like if terrence malick made a superhero movie yep you are going to sort of
and there are secret and it is also one of those movies that is like so infused with post 9-11
iraq war vibes even though it was definitely made before the iraq war right yeah it was made before like so infused with post 9-11 Iraq war
vibes even though it was definitely made
before the Iraq right yeah it was made
before night wasn't you know like and
like there's this sequence where the
Hulk is like jumping in the desert and
he's being like hit with cluster bombs
and I just remember being like whoa this
is like so you know anyway it's all
about it's all about a suppressed trauma
yeah I'm gonna put that
on my list
you're gonna love it
number three
at the box office
is
an animated film
Griffin
an animated film
in 2003
the most successful
animated film
of all time
at this point
wow
so it's still going
really strong
it's Finding Nemo
Finding Nemo
the biggest movie of that year.
Which is very delightful.
It's got fish and so on.
That movie made me cry.
I saw that in the same movie theater where I saw 28 Days Later because there's a sea turtle character, like a stoner sea turtle.
And he reminded me so vividly of one of my best friends from high
school i started tearing up sea turtles live to be 100 years old that's what sandy plankton says
when crush says how old he is at the end of finding nemo i usually tear up i'm tearing up
thinking about it right now actually uh i've been uh griffin uh the um opening of Moana when she's a little baby
And she plays in the water
And helps the turtle get to the ocean
Yes
I've been watching that a lot because my daughter likes it
Just that isolated clip
That sequence is a crack to children
It's lovely
It's a lovely sequence and it has a little baby in it being cute
But the turtle in it
I'm like they just fucking stole this from Finding Nemo.
It looks exactly the same.
It's just the same damn turtle.
They just dropped him in.
What's Crush?
Look, Crush, he wasn't going to hit his SAG health insurance that year.
Right, yeah.
And he phoned up Disney and he asked them to throw him a bone.
Number four is 28 Days Later.
Number five, it's a film we've covered on this podcast.
It's a sequel.
It's a big hit.
It's not well-liked. And there will be's a film we've covered on this podcast. It's a sequel. It's a big hit. It's not well liked.
And there will be a new edition in this series
in theaters soon. It just dropped its
trailer.
Too Fast, Too Furious?
Too Fast, Too Furious.
Wow.
What did you think of the Fast X trailer,
Griffin?
Good. I've only seen it two times yet.
So I'm barely processed.
But, yeah, I did like
it. I wasn't as amped. The F9
trailer, you know, we recorded that
reaction live. I was edge of my seat.
I still remain a little skeptical
of this one. Yeah, this one lacks the
hook of that trailer a little bit.
This one's just kind of like, you know,
family is tested, and you're like, yeah,
sure, it's a nice movie.
There are some interesting pieces on the board but i'm not i'm not hooting and hollering yet
uh as some other movies uh that year and that's beautiful summer of 2003 bruce almighty a huge hit
uh that year the italian job mark walberg uh as michael caine um rugrats go wild is that the first Wahlberg as Michael Kane. Rugrats Go Wild? Is that
the first Rugrats? That's the Wild
Thornberry's crossover. Oh, God.
Right. Jesus. They allowed that
in theaters. Okay.
Hollywood Homicide, the Josh Hartnett
Harrison Ford team up.
Notorious. That was a movie?
It was called Hollywood Homicide?
Oh, Hollywood Homicide. It's like,
what if there was a detective in LA who was also a real estate agent?
That's literally the premise of that movie.
That's a movie?
Yes, like a career killer for everyone involved.
Is it a comedy?
It's a comedy.
Oh, okay.
A crime comedy.
Right.
Like an action comedy.
But it's one of those classic, like, Harrison Ford just looks like, get me out of here.
I don't know why I'm doing this
and Josh Hartnett is like completely at sea
you know just like why am I in a movie with Harrison Ford
Breeze
we've already done this
on mic so I'll just send you the link
and recommend that you do it on your own time
for your own enjoyment but I highly recommend
you looking at the cast list
of Hollywood Homicide
the list of actors and the character
names of who they play. Yeah.
Check it out sometime. And then number 10,
Alex and Emma, Rob Reiner's
famed flop. Yeah.
Where Luke Wilson
has to write a novel or something.
Yeah. A lot
of flops in this top five. A lot of
top 10 belly flops
from major artists. And three blank check movies in the top 10. A lot of top ten belly flops from major artists. And three
blank check movies in the top ten.
Yes. But movies I remember seeing
in theaters very profoundly. Charlie's Angels
Hulk, Finding Nemo, Whale Rider
is in the top fifteen. And
that's a movie I remember seeing in theaters
and sobbing when she
rides the whale
at the end or whatever she does.
She does, in fact, ride that whale. And, you know, anyway whale at the end or whatever she does she does in fact why ride that whale
yeah uh and you know anyway um that's it david have we covered everything about 28 days later
that you wanted to mention not even close but it was a really fun episode and i was really i was
really glad to have the opportunity to re-watch this movie well maybe we'll just you know we'll
just you know do another one 28 months later
or something it's a really really good zombie movie and it's a really good genre movie and
it's not as affecting to me now as it was 20 years ago but it was uh and in a weird way it was a very
comforting movie for me back when it came out because of all the stuff we talked about hours
ago yeah but you felt yeah hours ago okay so it's time to be done uh and uh that's oh i didn't
mean that as a critique i was just like it was hours ago though you're not time has passed yeah
um yes uh but yeah no i mean it's just that thing where you were like right okay someone
someone understands that's sort of how you were feeling yeah right yeah right you know like okay
okay people do get what I'm feeling.
But David, what do you want to, you know, obviously election profit makers.
That's the podcast I do with my friend about betting on elections.
And you can watch Dicktown on Hulu.
The great Dicktown.
Dicktown's so good.
Starring Griffin Newman.
Guest starring.
But it's a Reese Hodgman vehicle.
And as far as the other show,
Going Deep with David Reese,
I think you can buy it on YouTube.
I'm looking this up right now.
Hold on.
Going Deep with David Reese.
It's always been moving around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We like to keep it moving.
It's a fast zombie of a TV show.
Keep it moving.
Keep it moving.
Don't let it, not one place.
Yeah.
Don't let it throw up blood all over you.
I'm seeing both seasons for sale on iTunes and I would say it's money well spent.
Oh,
absolutely.
That's good to know.
Yeah.
And election profit makers is a Patreon.
You guys do all kinds of cool stuff on that page.
I love your Patreon.
Oh,
thank you.
Yeah,
you're welcome.
Uh,
thank you.
Thank you for coming back. It's always such a special.
Yeah, it was really nice to see you guys again. Ben, I hope you feel better soon. I'll be thinking of you.
Thank you so much.
It's nice to see you, David. Hit me up next time you're in NY.
I will. And if any of you guys are ever in LA, I hope you'll let me know.
Yeah. Oh, also, wait a second. David, hit me up next time you're in NY.
I don't want you to feel like this is
only Sims you can hit up.
Feel free to hit me up the next time. I can hit you up too?
Yeah, feel free, and I'll hit you
up the next time I'm in LA.
And maybe next time you're in New York,
hit up Ben. You can bump me if you're in LA.
If you want to bump. Give me a bump.
Alright, guys, let's be done.
Ben will bump you. Yeah, we can bump.
He's in LA.
Thank you all for listening.
Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe.
Thank you to Marie Barty for our social media
and helping to produce this show.
Thank you to Joe Bone and Pat Reynolds for our artwork.
Thank you to Lee Montgomery and The Great American Novel
for our theme song.
AJ McKee and Alex Barron for our editing.
JJ Birch for our research.
You can go to blankcheckpod.com
for some links to some real nerdy shit,
including merch and a Shopify page
and Blank Check special features,
our Patreon show where we do franchise commentaries,
but we also do fun extra bonus stuff
such as 28 Weeks Later,
which we've talked about in this episode.
We can talk about more at length there.
As a reminder,
every 10 days, we do a new episode
on Patreon, but we also unlock an episode
from three years ago.
So if you want to go to patreon.com slash blank check
and just sample
the 2020
episodes for free, I'm sure they're very
normal and in no way reflect society
collapsing 28 days later. There's that Alien Resurrection one when trump had just gotten covid that one's always
a good listen is that the one where ben falls asleep yes and ben falls asleep yeah that's a
wild ride that one it's a real wild ride that's that's a real time we're just vibrating with
energy because we're just like we can't talk about it because what if he dies yes right in
between recording this and releasing
it. The most exciting day
in Twitter history. What a day.
We had a Zoom meeting
to be like, do we talk about
this at all? Right. What do we do?
Yeah.
But you can listen to that. That'll be
unlocked soon. Tune in next
week for Millions.
Yeah. Next week is Millions. Yeah.
Next week is Millions.
Oh, no, no.
You know what?
Next week is our Blankies episode.
Oh, well, good thing you checked.
Yes.
Good thing I checked.
Next week is the eighth annual Blankie Award, something like that. And then the week after that, we're back on the Boiled Train with Millions.
Yep.
Charming Euro kids comedy millions um and uh thank you again for dave coming david and uh it's been great yeah it's been
wonderful uh and as always uh let's hope that ben has uh only gotten infected with COVID and not rage.