4.5 stars out of 5
28 Days Later came out 23 years ago and all I remember is that it was scary and very good, and also that a couple of years earlier, Sandra Bullock had starred in a movie called 28 Days so that was kind of funny. When I recently learned that director Danny Boyle (not to confuse you, but he also directed 127 Hours) and writer Alex Garland were back for this belated sequel, and knew I could get to the theater in less than 28 minutes, I didn’t waste another second.
The night before, I finally watched 2007’s 28 Weeks Later, written and directed by different guys, though Boyle and Garland were executive producers. It was good! It was scary! And it was not necessary to watch to enjoy 28 Years Later!
For those just tuning in: 28 years ago, a virus spread throughout England, turning people into flesh-craving zombies. In part II, the U.S. military began allowing people back into the evacuated country. Whoops, the virus reappeared. At the end it seemed that the virus had reached mainland Europe, but very early in 28 Years Later, introductory text tells us no, don’t worry about that, it’s only England, we might’ve changed our mind about this next sequel but it’s been 18 years and we’re filmmakers and can do whatever we want.
We meet 12-year-old Spike and his dad and his bedridden, sick mom. They live on an island cut off from modern conveniences but also safe from freaking zombies. Instead of a bar mitzvah, dad takes Spike zombie hunting on the mainland which can be walked to during low tide. The townspeople hail Spike the returning hero but he’s not interested in that. He’s learned of a doctor on the mainland — they don’t have one on the island — and perhaps that doctor can heal his ailing mum.
Newcomer Alfie “What’s It All About” Williams plays Spike, and I’m very judgmental about child actors, but by god he does a real nice job of carrying the film. Alfie has an open, innocent face; he looks and behaves like a real kid. And he’s able to convey fear, bravery, wonder, rage, despair, and love. The doctor is a very surprising-looking Ralph Fiennes and he’s the other really key actor here. The doctor, isolated for a quarter century and surrounded only by death, has gained some hard-won wisdom that he’s able to sweetly pass along to Spike. I did not expect to get choked up by a zombie flick but there’s some real mature emotion delivered.
Don’t fret, there’s also thrilling undead action and scares and a little bit of comedy. With an unexpected ending sequence, I thought to myself “Bravo!” — this is a fully entertaining production. And since learning this is just part one of a trilogy with Boyle and Garland totally in and Cillian “Oppenheimer” Murphy returning from the original movie, I’ll be counting the days till the next installment. I’ll let you know when we get to 28.
Movie Review: 28 Years Later
Aquarium Playlist, 7/8/25
EPISODE #649: CASEY KASEM TRIBUTE 2025
“The New Scooby-Doo Movies” [ALTERNATE THEME]
The Doors — “Hello, I Love You” [Billboard No. 1, 8/3/68 – 8/10/68]
The Rascals — “People Got To Be Free” [No. 1, 8/17/68 – 9/14/68]
The Beatles — “Hey Jude” [No. 1, 9/28/68 – 11/23/68]
Diana Ross & the Supremes — “Love Child” [No. 1, 11/30/68 – 12/7/68]
Marvin Gaye — “I Heard It Through the Grapevine” [No. 1, 12/14/68 – 1/25/69]
Tommy James & the Shondells — “Crimson & Clover” [No. 1, 2/1/69 – 2/8/69]
Sly & the Family Stone — “Everyday People” [No. 1, 2/15/69 – 3/8/69]
Tommy Roe — ”Dizzy” [No. 1, 3/15/69 – 4/5/69]
Bruce Springsteen — “Chimes of Freedom” [live; long-distance dedication from Jimmy to the Mapman]
The 5th Dimension — “Aquarius/Let the Sun Shine In” [No. 1, 4/12/69 – 5/17/69]
The Beatles — ”Get Back” [No. 1, 5/24/69 – 6/21/69]
The Rolling Stones — “Honky Tonk Women” [No. 1, 8/23/69 – 9/13/69]
The Archies — “Sugar Sugar” [No. 1, 9/20/69 – 10/11/69]
The Temptations — “I Can’t Get Next to You” [No. 1, 10/18/69 – 10/25/69]
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Aquarium Playlist, 7/1/25
EPISODE #648: LISTENER AUDREY RETIRES
The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
Makeout Point — “Audrey”
Freedy Johnston — “There Goes a Brooklyn Girl”
Jimmy Cliff — “Oh Jamaica”
King Missile — “As I Walked Through Queens”
The Move — “Fire Brigade”
“Meet the Mets”
The Baseball Project — “From Nails to Thumbtacks”
Belle & Sebastian — “Piazza, New York Catcher”
Edwin Starr — “Headline News”
Marshall Crenshaw — “Front-Page News”
Young Fresh Fellows — “Shake Your Magazines”
Johnny Paycheck — “Take This Job and Shove It”
Minus 5 — “Dear Employer (The Reason I Quit)”
Jack Silbert — “Small” [lyrics by Audrey Pavey]
Laura Cantrell — “Time”
Trisha Yearwood — “Come Fly With Me”
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Aquarium Playlist, 6/24/25
EPISODE #647: SUMMER 2025
The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
Helen Love — “Let’s Go Surfing”
Chubby Checker — “Dancin’ Party”
The Cowsills — “Most of All”
Good Grief — “Kissing Through Curtains”
First Class — “Beach Baby”
Awful Din — “Summer” [unsolicited Silbert edit]
Lawn — “Summertime”
The Junior League w/ Scott the Hoople — “Summer of Flies”
Lael Neale — “Sliding Doors & Warm Summer Roses”
Cliff Richard and The Shadows — “Summer Holiday”
The Turtles — “On a Summer’s Day”
The Scenics — “In the Summer”
The Primitives — “Summer Rain”
Fred Thomas — “Summer of OMD”
David Christian — “Stumbling Into Summer’s Arms”
Beach Boys — “Keep an Eye on Summer”
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Movie Review: The Phoenician Scheme
4.5 stars out of 5
I was so thrilled while watching this movie that only now, with a distance of a few days, do I realize that I didn’t totally get the ending, that maybe I passed out for a couple of key scenes in the last 20 minutes. But everything else was so much fun, and classic Wes Anderson.
The Phoenician Scheme is a road picture like The Darjeeling Limited, but the structure ends up being more like a video game, in which our protagonist must collect X number of points before reaching the end.
The protagonist/antihero is Benicio Del Toro playing the wonderfully named Zsa-zsa Korda. He is a ruthless, wildly successful, and seemingly indestructible business baron with an Elon-like brood of ignored sons and one estranged daughter, Liesl (Mia Threapleton), on the brink of entering a nunnery. Zsa-zsa hopes to reconcile with Liesl, taking her along on a journey to raise a missing amount of money to fully fund — what? Um, the Phoenician scheme. Which I understand to be a massive infrastructure project from which Zsa-zsa will greatly profit.
Also along on the trip is Michael Cera as the hilariously accented Bjorn, tutor turned executive assistant. He is falling for Liesl as we are too (but not as much as we fell for previous Anderson supercrushes Saoirse Ronan and Léa Seydoux). Good to see Cera biting into a more substantial comedic role than he’s had in some recent films.
Oh the people that Zsa-zsa and crew encounter in their travels! We visit Anderson alum Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Mathieu Amalric, Jeffrey Wright, Scarlett Johansson, Richard Ayoade, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Hope Davis. Zsa-zsa also finds himself in heaven a few times; is he temporarily dead or just imagining? I loved the tonal shift in these scenes, reminding me of Joel Cohen’s The Tragedy of MacBeth or any number of self-important perfume commercials. Even in the afterlife there are Anderson vets: Willem Dafoe, F. Murray Abraham, and the big daddy here, Bill Murray.
Playing “Spot the Star” is always entertaining, but the dialogue is so sharp and clever, the performances so deadpan hilarious, and (it is a Wes Anderson movie, after all), the littlest details in packages, signs, set design, etc. so finely turned out, that I felt Wes was trying a bit harder to really deliver than he has his last couple of times out.
Does Zsa-zsa deserve heaven? Redemption and forgiveness are major issues here. Wes Anderson tackles these topics in a satire of oligarchs and theocracy, with a side order of the meaning of family, all blended up in an old-timey screwball comedy. I may need to buy another ticket and see this movie again to catch anything I missed. Perhaps that was the Phoenician scheme all along.
Aquarium Playlist, 6/17/25
EPISODE #646: BRIAN WILSON TRIBUTE
The Four Freshman — “It’s a Blue World” [ALTERNATE THEME]
The Ronettes — “Be My Baby”
Beach Boys — “The Warmth of the Sun”
Beach Boys — “I’m Waiting for the Day”
Beach Boys — “Our Prayer”
Beach Boys — “Wonderful”
Beach Boys — “Heroes and Villains”
Jan & Dean — “Surf City”
The Honeys — “The One You Can’t Have”
Glenn Campbell — “Guess I’m Dumb”
Cub — “Surfer Girl”
Yo La Tengo — “Little Honda”
Los Straitjackets — “In My Room”
Brian Wilson — “Still I Dream of It” [demo]
Brian Wilson — “Love and Mercy”
Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks — “Orange Crate Art”
Beach Boys — “Surf’s Up” [early version, Brian solo]
Beach Boys — “’Til I Die”
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Thank You, Brian Wilson
We weren’t a big record-buying family, but somehow we owned the Beach Boys’ 1974 double-album compilation Endless Summer. And by the bicentennial summer and carrying into my 2nd-grade fall, I was in love with those Boys from Hawthorne and all those wonderful songs. (The Beatles’ red and blue compilations had come out in 1973, but it was several years before we picked those up. Maybe the Brothers Wilson took precedence because we lived in California?)
By the time we moved back east and I entered middle and high school, the sheen on the Beach Boys had faded somewhat. There was publicity when Secretary of the Interior James Watt banned them from playing a 4th of July concert on the National Mall (because they attracted “the wrong element”) and there was a minor radio and MTV hit, “Getcha Back.” Oh, and then a No. 12 pairing with the Fat Boys on “Wipe Out.” Not exactly their salad days. And anyway, I was getting much more interested in “alternative” music: R.E.M., the Replacements, the Pogues, etc. etc.
But crucially while in high school, I began to learn about the genius of Brian Wilson. Likely inspired by articles and best-album rankings in Rolling Stone magazine, I picked up a copy of his masterwork Pet Sounds at a Tower Records in Manhattan. It was… different. More musical, more nuanced, but still had those harmonies and hit songs. I could handle it. Plus I felt a certain cachet just by owning it.
While in college, my appreciation grew. First there was Brian’s heralded solo debut, though with a shadow cast over it by SoCal Svengali Dr. Eugene Landy who seemed to be taking advantage of our boy Brian. And then in the new bin at WRCT, my college radio station, there landed what was still a new concept, a “tribute album” to Brian entitled Smiles, Vibes & Harmony. The alternative acts included (with several musicians who would become my friends in later decades, such as Salt in Wound reader Clarke in New Orleans!) made Wilson seem that much cooler.
My deep dive into Wilson’s oeuvre really began with the purchase of the 1993 five-disc box set Good Vibrations. In 1995 there was a documentary I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times which shed more light on Wilson and his remarkable talent. Perhaps roughest to hear but still beautiful was the 1976 home demo of “Still I Dream of It” included on the doc’s soundtrack album. Wilson’s voice is in tatters but the magic was still there.
In 1998 I bought my first issue of MOJO magazine, because two heroes were on the cover: R.E.M.’s Peter Buck and Wilson. (Within, Peter interviewed Brian.) Two years later these influences crossed paths again: I bought the new two-albums-on-one-CD release of the Beach Boys’ 15 Big Ones and Love You (albums I remember from supermarket bargain racks in my early childhood) specifically because Peter Buck had written the liner notes. Even Brian’s “lesser” works were being reevaluated.
I am very thankful that I got to see Brian on-stage three times: once performing Pet Sounds with a large band including members of The Wondermints, who I loved; once performing the legendary lost-and-then-pieced together Smile album with a similar group of musicians; and finally reunited with the Beach Boys during their 50th anniversary tour in 2012.
There was charm and sadness to the new-millennium Brian. It was easy to be amused by his childlike responses to interview questions. Watching him live, I wondered if his keyboard was plugged in or if it was simply served as “security blanket.” And still I held out hope that, with the right collaborators (Rick Rubin? Andy Paley?), he’d put together one last great album of new material. But it wasn’t to be, and even as a fan who bought every new release, I finally drew the line at Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin and In the Key of Disney and the brutally-named No Pier Pressure.
Yes, it seemed like he loved to perform, but was it fair for his “organization” to keep pushing him out on these long tours, as his health continued to decline?
In the last couple of weeks, I wondered if something was up, as daughter Carnie Wilson began making sweet, nostalgic posts on social media. Still, when the news hit on Wednesday, it was shock. Hearing those early Beach Boys songs on the car radio (the best way to experience those songs), I was struck by the fact that this music that had provided me with complete joy for my entire life was now making me weep.
Back in 1990, Capitol Records had released the initial wave of two-fer CDs, and for reasons now forgotten, I picked up Today!/Summer Days (and Summer Nights!!). A song that really grabbed me was called “When I Grow Up (To Be a Man).” The Brian Wilson/Mike Love co-write was catchy, sure, but there such a wistful quality too, these young men capturing the idea that youth slips away before we know it. The background vocals list increasing ages (“14! 15! Won’t last forever…”) throughout the song’s 2 minutes, 4 seconds. I started a tradition of listening to the track every year on my birthday; it was fun when my new age was shouted out. But of course my age got later and later in the song, till you could just barely hear it in the fadeout: “32! 33!” And then that was it, 33 the last clearly heard age.
So that was a drag. I’d grown up to be a man. And as we get older still, and lose friends, family, favorite public figures, and start slowly breaking down ourselves, it hits home even more: Won’t last forever.
Brian Wilson is gone. It’s quite rare to have a beloved artist that lasts you from childhood through adulthood. But Brian went so far beyond that, giving us easy-to-swallow fun fun fun when we’re little and then, only when we are ready, he let us wonder. His own well-documented issues prevented him from giving us a blueprint for growing old, but that would’ve been too much to ask for anyway. Brian Wilson leaves us the most beautiful music ever created, and I will be forever grateful for that gift which allows us to return to youth again and again.
Aquarium Playlist, 6/10/25
EPISODE #645: LITTLE
Elliott Smith — “Little One” [ALTERNATE THEME]
Ezra Cohen — “Little Things”
Nina Simone — “I Want a Little Sugar in my Bowl”
The Replacements — “My Little Problem”
Heavenly — “So Little Deserve”
Gary U.S. Bonds — “This Little Girl”
Matthew Sweet — “Give a Little”
Laura Cantrell — “Little Bit of You”
Rolling Stones — “Try a Little Harder”
Luluc — “Little Suitcase”
Jack Frost — “Little Song”
The Equals — “Take a Little Sad Song”
Jonathan Richman — “To Hide a Little Thought”
Redd Kross — “It’s the Little Things”
Young Fresh Fellows — “I Don’t Let the Little Things Get Me Down”
Sly & the Family Stone — “Life” r.i.p. Sly Stone
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Movie Review: Mission Impossible—Final Reckoning
3.5 stars out of 5
Well, it’s the final Mission: Impossible, I reckon — until they decide to reboot the series in two years with an extended cameo from Tom Cruise as Jim Phelps. Or it’s a prequel reboot streaming show focusing on Phelps’ early days, to air on Amazon Prime. Principal photography will likely begin before I finish this review.
The film series has been reliable entertainment these past 29 years, with a rotation of top directors for the first 15 years: Brian De Palma, John Woo, J.J. Abrams, Brad Bird. Since then, my old high school chum Chris McQuarrie has directed and written or co-written the last four films. Initially, this comfortable collaboration (Cruise and action guru McQuarrie have worked together since 2008) was a shot in the arm for the series. But by now, I’m wondering if it’s gotten a bit too comfortable? I.E. Was there no one around to say, “Um, do you think this movie is getting too long?” (2 hr 49 min, topping Dead Reckoning’s 2 hr 40 min) or “Maybe there’s too much plot in this thing?”
The script definitely tries to add some gravitas to give some overarching meaning to these last 3 decades of Mission movies. These guys really love and value each other! And yet the actors still haven’t developed any real chemistry. And a phrase that’s uttered about 15 times, something about protecting those you hold close and those you’ll never meet, doesn’t have the beautiful simplicity of a “With great power comes great responsibility.”
The action is generally solid throughout, and includes one of the funniest action bits I’ve ever seen: The camera stays on a wincing woman’s face as she watches the unseen Cruise beat the crap out of a guy. But a few sequences seem like action for action’s sake — including a fistfight on a submarine and a ridiculous, extended biplane duel — which aren’t integral to the plot and could’ve been trimmed or even cut to reduce that bloated running time.
Also, the ending is pretty underwhelming. But come on, neatly wrapping everything up after eight movies would be a task very difficult to achieve!

Jack Silbert, curator