POPULARITY
How do you follow-up the film that redefined zombies for the 21st century? How does a civilization already years into a war on terror without end react to zombies? Bob Chipman and Todd Nathanson join, host, Dany Roth, to talk about how 28 Weeks Later is about consequences and how we tr to justify war crimes when we're afraid of our own shadows.
How do you reinvent the zombie archetype without losing something essential to what makes zombies so scary? Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's idea was to take the shambling dead and make them run at top speed instead. Bob Chipman and Todd Nathanson join host, Dany Roth, to talk about 28 Days Later, its post-9/11 zombie apocalypse, and why the military is always so darn evil in horror movies.
Host, Dany Roth is joined by creator of the Todd in the Shadows YouTube series, Todd Nathanson, for a clash of the titans. That's right, they take on two cartoons to decide which is the superior: The Adventures of the American Rabbit or Felix the Cat: The Movie. There will be no winners today.
Both were amazingly huge rap songs that left questionable legacies behind. But which is ultimately the more epic track: "Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice, or "U Can't Touch This" by MC Hammer? There isn't a perfect answer to this conundrum. Boldly diving into this quagmire are Todd Nathanson and Danny Roth, who attempt to make sense of it all.
Oasis' "Wonderwall" vs. Green Day's "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)": which is the most epic? In this episode, Todd Nathanson and Danny Roth pick it all apart with scant facts and little hard data.
Both were amazingly huge rap songs that left questionable legacies behind. But which is ultimately the more epic track: "Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice, or "U Can't Touch This" by MC Hammer? There isn't a perfect answer to this conundrum. Boldly diving into this quagmire are Todd Nathanson and Danny Roth, who attempt to make sense of it all.
Oasis' "Wonderwall" vs. Green Day's "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)": which is the most epic? In this episode, Todd Nathanson and Danny Roth pick it all apart with scant facts and little hard data.