Shaun Of The Dead

Pegg plays Shaun, whose dull life is interrupted by a plague of slow-moving zombies (a la Dawn Of The Dead). However, because he's so used to seeing drunks and beggars on the streets, he doesn't realise that they are actually zombies. Several scenes show people going about their daily lives in a state of somnambulistic catatonia - are the undead zombies really any different from these mindless commuters?
Although the film is very funny, the final scene did make me a little bit homesick. Shaun and his girlfriend wake up on a Sunday morning and plan their day: buy the Sunday papers, go down the local for a drink, watch a bit of TV, and go to bed. Here, on the other hand, the Sunday papers are wafer-thin. But if all I miss is the newspapers, things can't be too bad, eh?
Labels: films

6 Comments:
I wonder why the Sunday papers in some other countries are very big. Do they contain mostly advertising or a summary of weekly news?
p.kaplan
There is quite a lot of advertising, but mainly the Sunday papers are thicker because Sunday is traditionally the day which sets the news agenda for the rest of the week. So, all the big news stories are in the Sunday press.
I'll be in the UK for a week in November, including one Sunday, and I'm already looking forward to buying a huge pile of newspapers and reading them by the fireside.
You must have missed the Sunday papers so much. Any favourite papers in particular: for example the Sun?
The Sun is like Thai Rath - very sensationalist. I prefer the more serious ones like The Guardian or The Sunday Times, for politics/arts news.
the paper mat most lilky misses the observer and Guardian and curly fries and coffee at wetherspoons or a cupachino at
o briens with a friend. his friend sure does
Well, there are coffee and fries here, too... but I do miss the friend you're referring to (Andy).
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