28 Years Later, The Bone Temple
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How Jack O'Connell's Sir Jimmy Crystal and his gang of Jimmies take inspiration from the disgraced British icon and prolific sex offender
The filmmaker discusses her career mining wildly different IP, zombie semantics and capturing one of Ralph Fiennes' wildest performances to date: "It’s a beautiful example of collaboration in film and an actor just willing to really fucking rock it.
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,
The Bone Temple" at home? Here's when I think the horror franchise's next instalment will be available to stream.
Major spoilers below for anyone who hasn’t yet watched 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, so be warned, and don’t make Sir Lord Jimmy Crystal angry. Though I’ve already shared a lot of love for Nia DaCosta’s 28 Years Later sequel in my glowing Bone Temple review,
Entertainment Editor Kristy Puchko welcomed O'Connell and DaCosta to our Say More couch to dig into all things Bone Temple. When it came to Jimmy Crystal, the pair shared how they made sense of the madman whose biggest influences are The Teletubbies, Jimmy Savile, and his horrific childhood trauma.
It’s time to go back to zombie-infested Britain with “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,” the sequel to last summer’s post-apocalyptic hit. “The Bone Temple” has made $2.1 million in previews at the box office.
Spoilers: It's no shock to the franchise's fans that Cillian Murphy is involved, but the way he shows back up may surprise some. Director Nia DaCosta walks IndieWire through the return of Jim.
Critics are raving about Nia DaCosta's 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, and a big part of why is the absolutely sensational climax, in which Ralph Fiennes channels his inner metal god to perform Iron Maiden's "The Number of the Beast" before an awed Jimmy Crystal (Jack O'Connell) and his remaining Fingers.