The Walken Dead T-Shirt |
The Walken Dead shirt made of 100% cotton. Is it a virus? We don’t’ know where they come from but they can quote Walken and that’s what matters. Sure they may be dead, but they’re awesome. Order this awesome shirt before it’s too late… ...And you're a Cantaloupe. Pick one up here! |
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Walken Dead Tee just $7.99! Ends at Midnight tonight!
Coming Soon...Dead Walkers: Rise Of The 4th Reich
Synopsis: In 1945 the Second World War came to an end and the Nazis fled.
Scientists and military elite escaped across borders and found themselves in new worlds. Some fled to Russia, some the United States and others to South America.
Synopsis: In 1945 the Second World War came to an end and the Nazis fled.
Scientists and military elite escaped across borders and found themselves in new worlds. Some fled to Russia, some the United States and others to South America.
But there was another division, a forgotten group. A top secret and powerful team of men and women formed in the womb of the Nazi Occult.
Now, decades after the war, their work is nearing completion. The 4th Reich is ready.
It's more powerful and destructive than ever before. An army of hell is coming and only one man knows the truth.
His mission now, is to convince the world of a very dark and mysterious army raised in the pit of Nazi hell...
Check Out This Boy Scout Zombie Hunter Shirt @ BuyZombie.com
From helping others to hiding to taking out the undead there are a lot of skills you need to know when the zombie apocalypse comes. Sure many might laugh but at least we know that those who grew up as a boy scout these days will have the proper training to survive in a world overrun with the living dead.
Available at Red Bubble.
~Buyzombie.com
WORLD WAR Z ACTION FIGURES!
~idlehands1.blogspot.com
Jazwares made a big noise this year with releases of Nicktoons, Hanna Barbera, Adventure Time, Regular Show, Mortal Kombat, Street Fighter AND Scribblenauts toy lines...all at once. Though their Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat lines turned up in the Boy's Action Figure isles of Toys R Us, Jazwares must have felt an urge to take a slice of the horror action as well.
This is a 6 inch action figure line...providing yet another scale to your mismatched zombie horde. ~sigh~ You'll note all of NECA and Mezco's zombie action figures are in a 7 inch scale while McFarlane's The Walking Dead line is at 5 inches. Good news for the Marvel Legends and DC Universe Classics collectors though, I suppose.
Series one is said to include a Running Zombie, Soldier Zombie, Rebel Zombie, Firefighter Zombie and Gerry Lane (Brad Pitt).
This is a 6 inch action figure line...providing yet another scale to your mismatched zombie horde. ~sigh~ You'll note all of NECA and Mezco's zombie action figures are in a 7 inch scale while McFarlane's The Walking Dead line is at 5 inches. Good news for the Marvel Legends and DC Universe Classics collectors though, I suppose.
Series one is said to include a Running Zombie, Soldier Zombie, Rebel Zombie, Firefighter Zombie and Gerry Lane (Brad Pitt).
~idlehands1.blogspot.com
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
10 Zombie Games That Could Help Save Your Life
Zombies have been my favorite monsters for as long as I can remember. They come in all shapes and sizes and also in various media. The craze was kick started with George A. Romero with his classic flick The Night of the Living Dead. This film set the foundations for the genre as we know it: recently reanimated corpses brought back to life whose sole drive is to consume human flesh and brain.
The zombie has evolved over the years going from the stereotypical archetype to a more cunning and aggressive adversary who have the ability to run… and let’s face it, if the zombies rise up, I hope to God they’re the slow kind.
Fortunately though, in preparation for the zombie uprising, video game companies have produced a mass of games dealing with this very subject matter. Here we count down 10 of the best zombie games available. Not only are these some of the best zombie games ever made, but we recommend them purely because one day, they could actually help save your life. Well, if you play them enough, that is.
10. Killing Floor
Killing Floor is a first person shooter which is focused on cooperative play while battling through waves of zombie like creatures and other monstrosities.
The game was set in London, England and had you control an ex-army or Special Branch member in a bid to stop the disaster. You were encouraged to work as a team in many ways such as the usual covering team mates to giving money to less fortunate team mates or by welding doors shut to keep the horde at bay.
You could kit your character out in a different class to level them up which yielded gameplay bonuses. For example, if you had your player as a melee user, you got increased damage when using melee weapons and so on.
After surviving each wave you are given the chance to locate the Trader who will supply you with more ammo or new guns and when you got to the final wave- you had to fight the Patriarch- the huge chainsaw wielding Grand Daddy of the zombie horde.
Click here for the rest!
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
AMC'S 'WALKING DEAD' MARATHON
The Walking Dead returns on Sun., Feb. 10 at 9/8c, and AMC is celebrating by treating both the uninitiated and die-hard fans with two weekends full of marathons of the series. This Sun., Feb. 3 at 3PM/2c, The Walking Dead Season 1 will air in its entirety then the following Saturday at 10AM/9c, AMC will air Seasons 2 and 3 back-to-back and in full. Check out the full schedule here.
The Walking Dead returns on Sun., Feb. 10 at 9/8c, and AMC is celebrating by treating both the uninitiated and die-hard fans with two weekends full of marathons of the series. This Sun., Feb. 3 at 3PM/2c, The Walking Dead Season 1 will air in its entirety then the following Saturday at 10AM/9c, AMC will air Seasons 2 and 3 back-to-back and in full. Check out the full schedule here.
Rebellion teases something zombie-related for Valentine's Day
Rebellion, developers of Sniper Elite V2, are teasing something zombie-themed for 14 February. That, of course, is the international day of awkwardly explaining that you thought your relationship had moved beyond Valentine’s cards but that you’re very sorry anyway.
A brief teaser trailer shows a man running through some foggy locales pursued by what certainly appear to be zombie-like figures. In the accompanying text, it mentions “the Totraum,” which roughly translates as Dead Zone.
Though it’s by no means clear, this could well be a zombie-based add on for Sniper Elite V2. If not that, then perhaps something stand-alone.
Decide for yourselves, below.
~incgamers.com
WHO'S UP FOR A 'ZOMBIE ROAD TRIP?'
Description
In Zombie Road Trip the rules are simple - escape the zombie horde or have your brain eaten. Are you up for the challenge?
From the creators of the Tiki Totems saga comes a game that blends the boundaries of runner and racer trick games!
Race against the unrelenting Zombie Horde across the great wastelands in the never-ending game of survival. Shoot the zombies ahead with your impressive arsenal of weapons and witness true ragdoll-packed gore galore! Earn zombie coins to upgrade your ride and weapons to lay waste to the undead and show them just how much you hate them.
Perform and perfectly land tricks to earn boost and drive as far as you can, or else you might just die a horrible death!
Zombie road trip features :
- 5 landscapes each with its own distinct look
- fully randomised terrain (every play through will feel brand new)
- dynamic zombie demolition engine (every a zombie dies the collision will look awesome and new)
- 5 exciting weapons to dispatch your foes
- 11 unique cars
- 5 add ons that will change the way you play the game
- beautiful high def graphics
- spin bonus the wheel to earn more zombie coins
Description
In Zombie Road Trip the rules are simple - escape the zombie horde or have your brain eaten. Are you up for the challenge?
From the creators of the Tiki Totems saga comes a game that blends the boundaries of runner and racer trick games!
Race against the unrelenting Zombie Horde across the great wastelands in the never-ending game of survival. Shoot the zombies ahead with your impressive arsenal of weapons and witness true ragdoll-packed gore galore! Earn zombie coins to upgrade your ride and weapons to lay waste to the undead and show them just how much you hate them.
Perform and perfectly land tricks to earn boost and drive as far as you can, or else you might just die a horrible death!
Zombie road trip features :
- 5 landscapes each with its own distinct look
- fully randomised terrain (every play through will feel brand new)
- dynamic zombie demolition engine (every a zombie dies the collision will look awesome and new)
- 5 exciting weapons to dispatch your foes
- 11 unique cars
- 5 add ons that will change the way you play the game
- beautiful high def graphics
- spin bonus the wheel to earn more zombie coins
ISAAC MARION'S 'WARM BODIES' PREQUEL NOVEL 'THE NEW HUNGER' IS NOW AVAILABLE
The Jonathan Levine helmed 'Warm Bodies' hits US theatres this Friday (1st February) and so now the announcement and release of the prequel novel to the newly adapted film appears to have arrived just in the nick of time. The Isaac Marion penned novel 'The New Hunger' is released today courtesy of eBook publisher Zola Books and tells the real back story of the apocalyptic events leading up to the action about to be seen in 'Warm Bodies.'
The flick stars Nicholas Hoult ('X-Men: First Class'), Rob Corddry ('Hot Tub Time Machine'), John Malkovich ('Burn After Reading'), Lizzy Caplan ('True Blood') and the smoking hot Teresa Palmer ('I Am Number Four').
"In THE NEW HUNGER, Isaac Marion's much-anticipated prequel to WARM BODIES, America has been devastated by natural disasters and governmental collapse, as well as the annoying problem of zombies trying to devour any survivors. But 16-year-old Nora and her younger brother Addis are about to discover the most frightening thing yet—being abandoned by their own parents.
As the siblings begin their harrowing journey to connect with anyone who isn’t looking to rob them or eat them, a 12-year-old girl named Julie is traveling in an SUV with her parents. She’s already seen her friends die and her school burn, and watched her father become nearly as cold and remorseless as the Dead. All she wants is to find a place she can call home, even if nothing will ever be the same.
Nearby, a man awakens in the woods, unsure of where, or who, he is. He struggles to remember the details of his life, but only a single letter comes to him. "R."
~horror-asylum.com
‘Evil Dead’ Remake Slapped With NC-17 Rating; Film To Be Cut For R Rating
The amount of blood split in the red band trailer for Fede Alvarez’s remake of the Evil Dead should be a good indication of what the rating will be. A very hard R is what Sony Pictures wants, but it looks like they got more than they bargained for as the first cut was given a NC-17 rating by the MPAA.
The level of violence and just general tone of the trailer certainly gave off the hard R vibe, but if the first cut was really NC-17, I’m worried what kinds of cuts will be made to make it that hard R. A lot of what we saw in the latest red band trailer made people believe that this Evil Dead could live up to its predecessors while making their stomach twist in knots. But how much will be cut from it remains to be seen. Let’s just hope it’s not enough to hurt the film.
On the other hand, the NC-17 confirms that this film is everything that we thought it would be and then some. Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell, who are on board as producers, gave their seal of approval. It also helps that Raimi himself picked Alvarez to direct Evil Dead.
While gushers of blood and extreme cases of fright are a plenty in the red band trailer, the final cut of the film has a lot to live up to if it is being marketed as “The Most Terrifying Film You Will Ever Experience.”
Sony Pictures will release Evil Dead on April 12, 2013.
~geeksofdoom.com
REMASTERED 'WHITE ZOMBIE' BLU-RAY REVIEW
Kino's remastering and re-release of White Zombie, generally regarded as the original zombie horror feature, is suitably timed. The subgenre hasn't only endured, but persists at the height of its popularity, neck and neck with vampire stories in a cultural race to the bottom, their respective "twists" on generic boilerplate masking a dead-eyed derivativeness. For the zombie film (or comic book, or cable television drama), that boilerplate was struck by George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead in 1968, and its subsequent sequels established a loose conception of the undead threat: lumbering, beholden to no centralized authority, sensitive to headshots and decapitations.
If, according to Franco Moretti's "The Dialectic of Fear," the vampiric threat (at least as embodied in the character of Count Dracula) operates chiefly as a metaphor for monopoly capital, binding those English bourgeois interlopers to his spell and extracting the blood of their industry, then the zombie poses a more anarchic, horizontalized threat. In post-Romero, hyper-allegorized zombie cinema, the hulking undead mass can be generally understood as the anti-Draculean annihilation of capital. Flesh and blood are acquired, but not retained; civilization is destroyed, but not remodeled. If zombies seem infinitely spongy as functional allegories for this or that, it's their non-hierarchic function that retains the kernel of their monstrousness.
White Zombie is interesting—even if it's just in rough historical register—precisely because it's not this kind of zombie movie, and so casts into relief the radicalism (however incidental) of genre-definers like Romero. In 1932, there was no zombie-cinema boilerplate. And so screenwriter Garnett Weston and director Victor Halperin drew liberally from the Dracula mythos, going so far as to cast Béla Lugosi, fresh off of Tod Browning's 1931 Universal feature, as Murder Legendre, a white voodoo master enslaving a class of brain-dead Haitian laborers. In the film's most remarkable scene, one in an assembly line of zombies seen manning a sugarcane mill falls into the grinder and is pulverized off screen as his brethren drone on obliviously. It's as fine an image for postcolonial capital pillaging as anything out of Bram Stoker's European monopoly mode.
In White Zombie, it's not an earthbound extraterrestrial satellite or some other such Atomic Age fallout the reanimates the dead, but good old-fashioned racist voodoo. Yet the film isn't an elegant parable about labor or colonialism. Rather, it defers that imagery to a more blandly straight-ahead horror story of a plantation owner (Robert Frazer) enlisting the help of Lugosi's voodoo industrialist to enslave Madge Bellamy's Madeline. Among the stiff acting and slapdash editing rhythms, White Zombie offers some nice touches. There's Lugosi's typically charismatic performance, and Bellamy's unsettling believability as a zombified love slave, her porcelain visage and puckered lips accented by a hollow stare that seems to tacitly question the role of post-Pickford Hollywood ingénues as vacuous star objects.
It's tempting to connect this primitive zombie feature with Jonathan Levine's Warm Bodies, the latest of many revisions on that post-Romero generic model. In both, zombie-ism is more of spell than irremediable diagnosis, the kind of thing that can be broken by the soppy rule of true love. If Levine's film seems like little more than opportunistic cash-in on the runaway success of the Twilight filims, then White Zombie seems no less a similar redoubling on the success of Browning's Dracula and especially Lugosi's enigmatic screen presence. At their apex of their allegorical authority, zombies may fundamentally destroy. But that doesn't mean their inexhaustible popularity as monster du jour can't be harnessed to the whims of real-deal market maneuvering, their principally anarchic menace yoked to the proverbial voodoo master of capital.
Image/Sound:
Kino Lorber's White Zombie remaster draws from two main sources. The bulk of the film is cut from the 35mm negative, while a few scenes are worked in from a 16mm print, creating an obvious, if understandable, waffling in image and sound quality. The restored print does the film no real favors, removing all the grain and appearing overly enhanced, which only works to reveal the loosely stitched seams of this middling indie horror film. A grainy, more authentic-feeling version of the film packaged with the disc's extras proves the preferably way of watching the film. The audio is fine, considering the age and low budget of the film, albeit with a few noticeable lapses in dialogue tracking.
Extras:
Curiously, Kino has decided to package their new remaster with a "raw" version of the film. Considering what may be generously called the coarse charms of White Zombie, the battered version actually benefits the material. For all intents and purposes, consider this the "real" White Zombie. Film historian Frank Thomson's commentary track proves fairly informative, even if it errs toward the light and anecdotal. Also included is a 1951 theatrical reissue trailer, a stills gallery, and a hilarious "Intimate Interview" with Béla Lugosi, in which he stalks around his garden offering obtuse answers to a plucky female reporter, eventually scaring her into some shrubs. It's an interesting look at how press materials functioned in the 1930s, and how resolved Lugosi was to stoke his overblown enigmatic allure.
Overall:
Kino offers a serviceable package for a serviceable early indie horror film. The release is made considerably better by its buried alternate cut "extra," as well as film's interest for zombie diehards eager to bone up on the genre's pre-boilerplate origins.
~johnsemley/slantmagazine.com
World War Z Author Max Brooks Explains How to Pack a Zombie Survival Kit
It’s been almost a decade since author and former Saturday Night Live writer Max Brooks first wroteThe Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead, a book that seems increasingly prescient as zombies continue their invasion into the media landscape through TV shows like The Walking Dead and films like the upcoming World War Z, which also happens to be based on a novel written by Brooks.
Luckily, the man himself hasn’t shied away from keeping the public informed on how to stay alive in the event of a zombie apocalypse, giving lectures on the topic across the country – the latest of which is being held Thursday at San Francisco’s California Academy of Sciences as part of SF Sketchfest.
In the face of zombie threats both old and new, Wired asked Brooks about the ten essential items needed for an zombie survival kit, which Brooks says should look similar to most disaster preparedness kits: “You won’t have to pack any zombie-specific items, not like a werewolf kit where you’ll need silver bullets or a vampire kit where you’ll need lots and lots of glitter.” His packing list is smart and practical, and – surprisingly – full of what he calls “little boring details” that can keep people alive in almost any situation:
1. WATER!2. Some way to collect and PURIFY water!3. Broken-in hiking boots (blisters are not funny!)4. Dry socks (trench foot is definitely not funny!)5. A radio that doesn’t need batteries (and an earpiece so you’re not broadcasting to everything living and undead within earshot)6. Some means of making fire (matches are good, flint and steel and char cloth are better)7. Some means of self-defense (preferably something that doesn’t need reloading)8. A first aid kit9. A Swiss army knife or multi-tool10. The Zombie Survival Guide — ONLY if it’s in paperback! Hey, I love e-books too, but remember, in a crisis, paper doesn’t break or simply run out of juice!
“I feel if you’re prepared for a zombie plague, you’re prepared for most natural disasters,” Brooks said. “For me, zombie survival isn’t about guns and violence and nail-biting action. We live in a culture that thrives on hype and panic, and that’s a sure recipe for disaster. I always tell people, ‘In a crisis, think about what Congress or Fox News would do and then just do the opposite.’”
Brooks says that the one thing he wishes he could go back to his book on preparing for the undead apocalypse is a chapter on avoiding what he calls “overenthusiastic prep-ers.” “When I wrote The Zombie Survival Guide, there was hardly anyone thinking about how to survive an undead plague … Now, literally millions of people are thinking about what they would do, and of those millions, there’s gotta be some percentage that really, REALLY want it to happen. Those people scare me more than zombies. A zombie plague might or might not happen, but mentally unbalanced, well armed, fringe citizens with itchy trigger fingers are definitely a reality.”
And while more and more writers and filmmakers are creating new zombies to be afraid of every few months (Catch Warm Bodies this Friday!) he remains a traditionalist. “I’m just focused on the ones that have always scared me,” he said. “For all other inquiries, press 2 for Zack Snyder, press 3 for Danny Boyle, press 4 for the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies guy, or press 5 to stay on the line for another couple minutes while someone else thinks up another new kind of zombie.”
Oh, and if you’re wondering about World War Z, Brooks has seen the trailer, and not much else. “It’s kinda hard to form an opinion from just that… well, hard for me,” he said. “Most folks on the interweb seem to have no problem in that department. I guess we’ll all just have to wait and see.”
~angelawatercutter/wired.com
BLURPPY Artists Project – 8 Gifted Artists Interpret Paramount’s Upcoming Zombie Apocalypse Thriller “World War Z”
by blurppy
by blurppy
Back in November Blurppy did an article announcing Paramount’s release of the first trailer for their upcoming summer blockbuster staring Brad Pitt called World War Z. The movie is based off the best selling book by Max Brooks and revolves around United Nations employee Gerry Lane (Pitt), who traverses the world in a race against time to stop the Zombie pandemic that is toppling armies and governments and threatening to decimate humanity itself.
One of the things that stood out to me was the lack of a substantial poster that did the movie or the book justice. The poster, seen above, made me think that this was an opportunity for some talented creatives to interpret the movie with their own images and to try and create something special. After over 2 months, that is just what they did. The artists involved with this project have taken on the moniker “Print Posse“. (Hashtag it on Twitter, they talk a lot!) The challenge was to create an image for a movie that they had not seen yet and had limited visual assets available.
Take a look at their images and feel free to comment on Twitter using our #printposse as a way to keep the comments grouped. I want to thank the artists Tracie Ching, Midnight Marauder, Marko Manev, Chris Garofalo, Marie Bergeron, Adam Rabalais, David Moscati and Matt Ferguson for their enthusiasm and efforts, not only with the images but with the reviews and for their support of each other during the process. Each artist has delivered their own unique take on what is already one of the most anticipated movies of 2013. Below each image I have included info about the artist so that you can get more familiar with them.
“In order it is Japanese, German and Russian and they all say their respective terms for ”World War”. Drawing from the book where its focuses on many stories all over the globe to show that the epidemic isn’t hitting in only one area and that all countries are not only infected but have equal parts to play in the stories progression.” – David Moscati
About the following companion pieces: “The concept is that they are minimalist art cards that would be a giveaway to people at the showings of the film, etc.” – Matt Ferguson
As you can see, each artist did an outstanding job. Please let us know which are your favorites down in the comments section below. I hope you enjoy these images as much as I do. I think they are all pretty impressive for different reasons.
~blurppy.com
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