Showing posts with label 28 Years Later. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 28 Years Later. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Agriculture - Live on KEXP

 
Mr. Brown first put L.A.'s Agriculture on my radar, and while I've logged a couple evenings spinning their 2025 album, The Spiritual Sound, I'm not sure I actually "got it" until I saw this live performance on KEXP.




NCBD:

A nice, easy week with two books I am very much looking forward to reading:


One issue left after this one, and I can't wait to see how David and Maria Lapham's Good As Dead shakes out in the end. Fairly ominous solicitation over on League of Comic Geeks: 

"The truth behind the Port Lindon disaster is revealed, but not everyone will survive to hear it."

Mystery, Crime and Suspense, the way only the Laphams can do it! I've loved having a new series from them, so much so that this might kick off a long-overdue Stray Bullets reread.


Apparently, Walsh and Tynion's Exquisite Corpses just got optioned for adaptation. Couldn't happen to a crazier, bloodier book. Already cinematic in scope, this one really kicks you in the face every month. Hold my beer while I put in my mouthguard, new issue




Watch:

Last Thursday night, K and I hit our local theatre for the first showing of Nia Dacosta's 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple. We were coming in hot off our first rewatch of Danny Boyle's preceding film, which we were both a little lukewarm on after our initial theatrical viewing back in July of 2025. 

Watching that first film again, I found I had warmed to it. Boyle is first and foremost an innovator, and I think my initial disconnect from the first chapter in his and Alex Garland's 28 Years Later trilogy had a lot to do with the visual language of the film, and not so much with the story. Jarring camera work, counterintuitive editing, stylized backgrounds and stock footage, and mixed-media injections all made for a unique but initially confusing undertaking. Having gotten that out of the way and acclimated to the expectation for these elements, the film played a lot better. 

And now we have this: a film so confident and viscerally affecting, not even the trailer takes away from it. 


I can't wait to see this one again on the big screen, and maybe more importantly, what a success like The Bone Temple will do to propel Dacosta's career into the stratosphere. 




Playlist:

Muddy Waters - Electric Mud
David Lynch & Marek Zebrowski - Polish Night Music
Mountain Realm - Stoneharrow
Various - Twin Peaks (Music from the Limited Event Series)
John Zorn - IAO: Music in Sacred Light
Gylt - In 1,000 Agonies, I Exist
Deafheaven - New Bermuda
Dean Hurley - Anthology Resource Vol. 1: 𝝙𝝙
David Lynch - The Air is on Fire
Agriculture - The Spiritual Sound




Card:

One Card from Thoth for today:


Who says you can't always get what you want? 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Nite Owls

 
From JD McPherson's excellent 2024 album Nite Owls. I gave this one a spin a few times last year, but on the way back from Chicago over the weekend, Mr. Brown threw me a burned copy and I stepped into its sonic beauty early yesterday and just couldn't get out. Fabulous, and one of those that should have made my "Best of" list last year (there are always regrets).

You can snag a copy of Nite Owls from New West Records HERE and it's available on every streaming platform. Especially with the heat we're experiencing in the MidWest/South right now, the guitar on this track is like a cool drink of minty water. Love it!




NCBD:

This week's Pull has a couple of new number ones I'm absolutely ecstatic about. Let's get into it:


The penultimate issue of Tyler Boss & Adriano Turtulici's You'll Do Bad Things. I LOVE this book. The Giallo description is spot on - there have been a few moments that remind of lesser-known Gialli - and Turtulici's art is perfect for that particular genre-tone. 


Man, after last month's issue 19 of Void Rivals, I am ready for more total expanded Transformers Universe action! This book continues to impress the hell out of me. And now we have Solilia and Darak in opposition again??? This year's Energon Special sets us up for The Quintesson War, starting in issue 25 - that's five issues to go! In the interim, a lot of pieces are moving around Kirkman's cosmic board, and it's nothing short of thrilling watching elements of Cobra-La, the Transformers, the Great Ring, and the Quints make moves on one another. 


I picked up the first issue of Zander Cannon's Sleep last week based on my constant impulse to find the next book that will blow me away. At first glance, I didn't think it was going to be for me, as the art style took a little getting used to. By the end of the issue, however, I recognized Cannon's art as a


A new book from That Texas Blood author Chris Condon, so I am in! I have not read the solicitation and I'm unfamiliar with artist Jeffrey Alan Love, so I'm going in totally blind. Best possible way to experience anything, especially a writer as cinematic as Condon!


Building up to a reread on this one. I love the worlds that Lemire creates and the textures he creates them with when he writes and draws. 


It has been SO Long since Lazarus graced comic shop shelves. Not a complaint, but in the intervening years, I've come to reference this book to anyone I talk politically/socially to, because it's undeniable - the future Rucka and Lark set out in this series is our future. Chilling. 




Watch:

Monday night K and I saw Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's 28 Years Later, and today as I'm typing this, I'm not really sure how I feel about it. 


Let me say this up front - 28 Years Later is not a bad film. Anything I didn't like about it is, in my mind at this time, suspect, because it's all due to the unique approach to pretty much everything that Boyle took.

It's already become common knowledge that Boyle used iPhones for some of the filming. In fact, an article I read on Wire discussed how he used specially built rigs that held 20 iPhones, allowing them to film the action from slightly different angles and cut between them. I think the result of this "poor man's bullet time" as he called it created a different and jarring visual experience. It's not bad at all, but it really helped the film usurp pretty much all of my expectations. 

There are a lot of other off-putting textures here as well: old movie footage sewn in periodically as a kind of juxtaposition between the world as they know it and the world as it used to be. A heightened sense of motion that made me wonder if there was a different frame rate involved. All of this combined to make for such a startlingly different cinematic experience than I've ever had before. 

And then there were the track suits. But I'm leaving that out for now, as ultimately, I think 28 Years Later is going to remain slightly uncemented in my mind until I see the sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (or whatever the second in the new trilogy's title ends up being).  




Playlist:

Pixies - The Night the Zombies Came
Low Cut Connie - Art Dealer
YUNGBLUD - Idols
Dan Le Sac Scroobius Pip - Thou Shalt Always Kill (single)
Ren - Sick Boi
Drug Church - Prude
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
Frank Black and the Catholics - One More Road For the Hit
Childish Gambino - Because the Internet
Cocksure - K.K.E.P.
Cocksure - Corporate_Sting
JD McPherson - Nite Owls
Amigo the Devil - Vol. 1
Willie Nelson - Oh What a Beautiful World Songs of Rodney Crowell
The Reverend Horton Heat - Space Heater
Meat Puppets - Dusty Notes
What's the Furthest Place From Here? 7" Series - Chapter 006
What's the Furthest Place From Here? 7" Series  - Chapter 004
Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine - White People and the Damage Done
Primus - Frizzle Fry
The Cult - Electric
Ween - Painting the Town Brown




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• XIX: The Sun
• Six of Cups
• Ace of Cups

Open your eyes!!! Six of Cups indicates speaking directly to the "Godhead," which I'll interpret here as the sub or superconscious. GNOSIS is the breakthrough the Ace of Cups suggests. 

Specifically vague? Yes and no. I, of course, interpret this as having something to do with writing, which I started on full-bore again yesterday. I think there's an inkling here that the story I'm trying to tell is inside my mind, it just keeps getting blocked up on its way out, so that a ton of extra ideas end up bogging it down, i.e. capricious ideas that catch my fancy like the jingle of keys in front of a cat. I've said this here before and never follow up, but I need to begin meditating. No cleaner way to start a conversation with the deeper well inside.

Thursday, April 17, 2025

New Music From Stereolab!!!

 

Holy cow - new music from Stereolab!!! From the forthcoming album Instant Holograms on Metal Film, out May 23rd on Duophonic UHF Disks and Warp Records . Pre-order HERE.


Watch:

A full trailer for Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's 28 Years Later dropped while I slept, and just seeing the thumbnail, I'm excited. I'm not going to actually watch this trailer, mind you. But just knowing we're that much closer to this brings me joy.


My fear is this will play before every movie I go to the theatre to see until the film's release on June 20th.



Playlist:

OLD - The Musical Dimensions of Sleastak
Type O Negative - Life Is Killing Me
Primus - Pork Soda
Killing Joke - Eponymous
Stereolab - Aerial Troubles (single)
Type O Negative - Dead Again
Tad - Inhaler




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• XI: Justice
• Knight of Cups
• Nine of Swords

Balance creativity or sleeplessness could result.

I actually think this is telling me this so I do the opposite - I've wanted to work on some projects at night the last two weeks, but I'm finding it impossible to stay awake later than 11:00 PM most nights. I think I need to generate a fervor to inspire some 'sleeplessness.' Or at least, some sleep-delay.

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Squirrel Nut Zippers Live 28 Years Later!

 

Oh man! Mr. Brown steered me to this one the other day, and it's fucking EPIC. Reminds me how much I love this band. I need to get Hot! on vinyl like yesterday! Also, serves as a great reminder to pull out their Christmas album.
 


NCBD:

This week's pull list has some pretty exciting titles in it:


One name sums up my absolute excitement for this issue: BRUTICUS!!! I am a huge fan of the Combaticons, and seeing them dart in and out of the last few issues, I knew this couldn't be far away.


Loving Jeff Lemire's new series Minor Arcana so far, but then, I've really come to appreciate these books where he writes and does the art. His style is very distinct and very mature, i.e. he's been doing it long enough that it really feels 'complete.'


This is another new, limited Batman series. Here's the solicitation from League of Comic Book Geeks:

"Set during the early years of Batman's career, Batman: Dark Patterns delves into four mysterious cases as he attempts to cement his place as Gotham City's protector while the city itself fights back against him. This is the Dark Knight Detective at his most stripped-down core, a man relying on his wits, his skills, and little else as he tackles some of the most twisted mysteries Gotham City and its protector have ever encountered. Case 01: We Are Wounded A series of sickeningly gruesome murders has sent shock waves through Gotham. Are these the random works of a serial killer, or is there something more sinister at play? Batman attempts to get to the bottom of the mystery before any more victims are claimed."

Sounds pretty cool, eh? Definitely worth giving a shot, at the very least.



Watch:

Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's 28 Years Later got a trailer yesterday and there was no way I wasn't going to watch it, despite the fact that between now and the summer 2025 release date, I expect to be inundated with this trailer ad nauseam.


I'm a huge fan of the first two films in this series, and despite the usual disdain I hold for late-coming sequels, I'm pretty excited about this. It feels natural, not like a cash grab. 




Playlist:

Sumerlands - Dreamkiller
Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Black Sabbath - Sabotage
Orville Peck - Bronco
Bluekarma - The Communication
Anthrax - Among the Living
Anthrax - State of Euphoria
Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger
Blood Incantation - Absolute Everywhere
High on Fire - Cometh the Storm
Better Lovers - Highly Irresponsible
Ministry - HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES
Justin Hamline - The House With Dead Leaves
Double Life - Indifferent Stars E.P.
Ulver - Liminal Animals




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Five of Swords
• Page of Pentacles
• XI: Justice

Good will comes from finding a truce, and finding the truce comes from recognizing the "Lunar Pull" - Read: obscured influences - on seemingly unconnected processes. I'm not really sure how this applies to my daily life at the moment, but as always, it's good to approach the day with this in mind and see what reveals itself.