231 - Day Of The Dead (1985) & Train To Busan (2016)

Published: April 13, 2022, 4:40 a.m.

b'Get more at podsematary.com! Read our afterthoughts for this episode at https://twitter.com/PodSematary/status/1513644794572017664\\n\\nIt\\u2019s Resurrection Week on Pod Sematary! Chris & Kelsey have maybe seen one too many zombie movies, so it\'s a good thing both of these are pretty great.\\n\\nThe Classic Film: Day of the Dead (1985)\\n"Trapped in a missile silo, a small team of scientists, civilians, and trigger-happy soldiers battle desperately to ensure the survival of the human race. However, the tension inside the base is reaching a breaking point, and the zombies are gathering outside\\u201d (IMDb.com). The final installment of George A. Romero\'s original undead trilogy, Day of the Dead is a little slower than the others but a lot more brutal.\\n\\nThe Modern Film: Train to Busan (2016)\\n"While a zombie virus breaks out in South Korea, passengers struggle to survive on the train from Seoul to Busan\\u201d (IMDb.com). Zombie tropes and Korean melodrama are the order of the day, but Train to Busan is still exceptionally made and full of great characters and moments. \\n\\nAudio Sources:\\n"Day of the Dead" (1985) produced by United Film Distribution Company & Laurel Entertainment Inc.\\n"The Door" (Game of Thrones S06E05) produced by Television 360, et al.\\n"The Langoliers" (1995 TV Mini-Series) produced by Laurel Entertainment Inc., et al.\\n"M1 A1" written by Damon Albarn & John Harrison and performed by Gorillaz\\n"Pet Sematary" written by Dee Dee Ramone & Daniel Rey and performed by The Ramones\\n"Train to Busan" produced by Next Entertainment World, et al.'