Bludgeon Oath – Covenant of Ashes

Bludgeon Oath – Covenant of Ashes

Bludgeon Oath – Covenant of Ashes was released on August 14, 2025, on Bandcamp. The duo, hailing from Saguenay, is composed of Archaisch on vocals and Nebel, who handles all instruments.

From the very first track, Ashes Remember, the tone is set. The icy guitar sound, combined with keyboards, creates an atmosphere that is both epic and majestic, evoking a distant and victorious battle. The guttural vocals, drowned in spectral reverb, add a striking aggression that blends seamlessly into this cold and immersive soundscape.

Without a doubt, Bludgeon Oath knows how to craft powerful atmospheres. Covenant of Ashes is a captivating listen from start to finish, built on strong and engaging compositions. For me, Ashes Remember remains the standout track, but the album as a whole never disappoints.

Available on Bandcamp for just €1 (about CAD $1.62), it’s more than worthy of your support. Nothing stops you from giving more, considering the quality delivered.

➡️➡️ Follow Bludgeon Oath on Bandcamp ⬅️⬅️

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Review – 28 Years Later: A Sequel That Should Have Stayed Buried

Review – 28 Years Later

We had been waiting a long time for this third chapter in the saga launched by Danny Boyle in 2002. 28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later redefined the zombie film. Gone were the slow, clumsy undead: instead, we got enraged, violent, fast-moving infected, in a suffocating atmosphere that kept haunting viewers long after the credits rolled. Two landmark films that opened the way for an entire branch of modern horror cinema.

And then came 28 Years Later. Eighteen years later, expectations were sky-high for a spectacular comeback. What we got instead was disappointment. Crushing disappointment.

The story? Flat, predictable, uninspired. It feels like a watered-down version of things we’ve seen countless times before. The characters? Mostly laughable. It’s hard to care about them, and some feel ripped straight from a bad TV show. And let’s not even talk about the so-called “alpha zombies”: grotesque giant creatures that look more like failed video game bosses than the terrifying threat we were promised.

Visually, it barely passes. The special effects lack bite, and the grimy, oppressive atmosphere of the first two installments evaporates into dull, formulaic sequences. But the final blow—the nail in the coffin—is the ending. A sloppy, ridiculous conclusion that makes it seem as though the production simply ran out of time or money. You leave the theater thinking: “All that for this?”

The truth is unavoidable: Danny Boyle completely missed the mark. Instead of reinforcing the legacy of his own saga, he weakens it. Honestly, this sequel would have been better left unmade.

My rating: 3.5/10

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