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Check out my new post!I’ve published a new piece on Substack looking at 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple — not as a conventional zombie film, but as a reading of British culture after collapse.

The film becomes a kind of cultural archaeology: Burgess’ Manchester in the margins, pop music as memory, children’s television and celebrity mutating into belief, and a post-pandemic Britain patched together from whatever survived. It’s wild, analogue, and uncomfortably recognisable.

Savile Wigs, Droogs, and the Bone Temple: 28 Years Later Is British Horror at Its Best
Jan 14
at
11:30 AM

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