Empire Australasia

No./1 A modern horror classic gets an epic upgrade

FEW HORROR MOVIES have captured the terror of rail travel better than . Korean director Yeon Sangho’s high-concept zombies-on-a-train movie trapped a bunch of unsuspecting passengers in confined quarters with a rapidly spreading infection, as society collapsed out of the window. (Edgar Wright, a director not unfamiliar with thereached its terminus?

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Empire Australasia

Empire Australasia1 min read
This Month At Empire
2020 MAY HAVE been a turbulent year for movies, but the small-screen industry kept chugging along nicely and, in fact, helped fill the void for locked-down viewers. If we weren’t watching top-notch television series on our favourite TV channel or str
Empire Australasia1 min read
Classic Lines Of The Month
“The jokes we do with each other are so weird you have to remind yourself, ‘Okay…maybe the general audience isn’t quite as messed up as us.’” “If you look at the Infinity Saga, I don’t think any single person has gone through more pain and trauma t
Empire Australasia2 min read
Phantom Thread
OLIVIA COOKE: “The dinner table scene between Daniel Day-Lewis and Vicky Krieps in Phantom Thread. The way Vicky gets flustered was mesmerising. You can’t bottle that as an actor. It felt so spontaneous and such a visceral reaction. It’s what you cra

Related Books & Audiobooks