|
Post by Fairweather on Jul 31, 2009 13:43:52 GMT -5
First it was Jane Austen who got the zombie treatment. I haven't read PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES yet; Ms. Vane has, so I'll leave it to her to cover that one. Adding zombies to great literature is catching on, though, as in a DC production of what happens when Shakespeare's HAMLET is--uh--zombified www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073000901.htmlas it is in LIVING DEAD IN DENMARK. I keep waiting for somebody to drop in a line from M.R. James's story Count Magnus: maybe something like, "[Ophelia] should be sleeping, not walking. . ."
|
|
|
Post by Fairweather on Aug 4, 2009 10:18:10 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Fairweather on Oct 8, 2009 12:55:05 GMT -5
ARRRGGGGHHHH!!!! It's become a cottage industry: www.slate.com/id/2228262SENSE AND SENSIBILITY AND SEA MONSTERS. Colonel Brandon with an octopus face. (OMG. I WILL NOT go there. I WILL NOT think of Alan Rickman with an octopus face!!!!)
|
|
|
Post by Harriet Vane on Oct 8, 2009 19:55:47 GMT -5
ARRRGGGGHHHH!!!! It's become a cottage industry: www.slate.com/id/2228262SENSE AND SENSIBILITY AND SEA MONSTERS. Colonel Brandon with an octopus face. (OMG. I WILL NOT go there. I WILL NOT think of Alan Rickman with an octopus face!!!!) I don't think I'm going there, either, Fair. Zombies were quite enough, thank you.
|
|