Later, The Bone Temple
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The Alan Wake games are far more aligned with quirky Twin Peaks -esque survival horror than the ravaged post-apocalypse of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, so the similarities aren't plentiful. However, 2023's Alan Wake 2 became one of the most-discussed horror games in recent years for its late-game stage dubbed "Initiation 4: We Sing."
The Bone Temple" at home? Here's when I think the horror franchise's next instalment will be available to stream.
Na’vi and the Infected are locked in a battle for No. 1 over what is a very sluggish MLK weekend. The major motion picture studio in their commitment to theatrical forgot to release more wide entires,
If you remember back to the end of 28 Years Later, Spike (Alfie Williams) dropped baby Isla back at Holy Island and chose to stay on the mainland. As a horde of infected descended upon him, he was rescued by Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell) and his gang of Jimmys.
The Bone Temple” follows Spike’s journey through a world reshaped by the Rage Virus, as he confronts the horrors of survival while a sinister cult rises to challenge what remains of humanity.
The fourth installment of the excellent zombie movie series hit movie theaters Thursday night, and features one of Iron Maiden's most famous songs in an absolutely incredible scene. It would be way cooler to see it than to read about it,
“28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,” a Sony Pictures release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for strong bloody violence, gore, graphic nudity, language throughout and brief drug use. Running time: 109 minutes. Three and half stars out of four.
"28 Years Later" director Danny Boyle plans to have Cillian Murphy's Jim character be the main focus of a third movie.
"28 Years Later" was led by Spike (Alfie Williams), a 12-year-old boy venturing into the wilds of post-apocalyptic, zombie-filled UK. Spike is still around in "The Bone Temple," but actor Ralph Fiennes rises to be the standout star of this film.
Why you should watch it: Lifelong friends and artistic collaborators Ben Affleck and Matt Damon return to the screen alongside one another in Joe Carnahan's straight-to-Netflix action movie The Rip, which is loosely based on a true story and a throwback to the sorts of gritty cop thrillers they'd make all the time back in the '70s.