Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Battery is a 2012 American drama horror film and the directorial debut of Jeremy Gardner. The film stars Gardner and co-producer Adam Cronheim as two former baseball players trying to survive a zombie apocalypse. The film premiered at the Telluride Horror Show in October 2012 and received a video-on-demand release June 4, 2013.
Described as a "zombie movie for kids" [371] Pathogen: Emily Hagins: 2006: The documentary Zombie Girl: The Movie covers the making of this film. [372] Patient Zero: Stefan Ruzowitzky: 2018 [373] Peninsula: Yeon Sang-ho: 2020: Followup to Train to Busan, set in the same Universe [374] Pet Sematary: Mary Lambert: 1989 [375] Pet Sematary: Kevin ...
Zombie Girl: The Movie is a 2009 documentary directed by Justin Johnson, Aaron Marshall, and Erik Mauck. The film focuses on the making of the 2006 zombie film Pathogen that was directed by Emily Hagins , who was twelve years-old at the time.
The original "28 Days Later" was notable for making its creatures run, in contrast to the slow-moving zombies from movies like "Night of the Living Dead." Cillian Murphy attends the Academy Awards ...
Twenty-two years later, we have our first look at 28 Years Later.. The first trailer (shown above) for the sequel to 28 Days Later, Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's not-a-zombie-movie zombie movie ...
A person dressed up as a rabbit exits the underground system to attend the Zombie Walk, to mark the Day of the Dead in Sao Paulo, Brazil. ... How 'Sex Lives of College Girls' handled Reneé Rapp's ...
Emily Hagins made her first feature at the age of 12 in her hometown of Austin, Texas – a zombie movie called Pathogen. The documentary Zombie Girl: The Movie chronicled her process from start to finish. Hagins made her second feature, The Retelling, at the age of 14.
Zombie Girl released their first album, Back From the Dead, in 2006. [2]In 2008 Zombie Girl released a second album, Blood, Brains & Rock 'n' Roll. [3] It was delayed due to three separate printing companies refusing to print artwork that contained copious amounts of blood, as well as a brain on a plate.