Movie Review: In '28 Years Later,' a zombie pandemic rages on
Most movies are lucky to predict one thing. Danny Boyle's 2002 dystopian thriller '28 Days Later' managed to be on the cutting edge of two trends, albeit rather disparate ones: global pandemic and fleet-footed zombies.
Add in Cillian Murphy, who had his breakout role in that film, and '28 Days Later' was unusually prognostic. While many of us were following the beginnings of the Afghanistan War and 'American Idol,' Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland were probing the the fragile fabric of society, and the potentially very quick way, indeed, horror might come our way.
Boyle always maintained that his undead — a far speedier variety of the slow-stepping monsters of George A. Romero's 'The Night of Living Dad' — weren't zombies, at all, but were simply the infected. In that film, and its 2007 sequel '28 Weeks Later' (which Juan Carlos Fresnadillo helmed), the filmmakers have followed the fallout of the so-called rage virus, which emptied London in the first film and brought soon-dashed hopes of the virus' eradication in the second movie.
Like the virus, the '28 Days Later' franchise has proven tough to beat back. In the new '28 Years Later,' Boyle and Garland return to their apocalyptic pandemic with the benefit of now having lived through one. But recent history plays a surprisingly minor role in this far-from-typical, willfully shambolic, intensely scattershot part three.
The usual trend of franchises is to progressively add gloss and scale. But where other franchises might have gone global, '28 Years Later' has remained in the U.K., now a quarantine region where the infected roam free and survivors — or at least the ones we follow — cluster on an island off the northeast of Britain, connected to mainland by only a stone causeway that dips below the water at high tide.
Boyle and cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle, who innovatively employed digital video in '28 Days Later,' have also turned to iPhones to shoot the majority of the film. Boyle, the 'Slumdog Millionaire,' 'Trainspotting' filmmaker, is an especially frenetic director to begin with, but '28 Years Later' is frequently gratingly disjointed.
It's a visual approach that, taken with the story's tonal extremes, makes '28 Years Later' an often bumpy ride. But even when Boyle's film struggles to put the pieces together, there's an admirable resistance to being anything like a cardboard cutout summer movie.
The recent event that hovers over '28 Years Later' is less the COVID-19 pandemic than Brexit. With the virus quarantined on Britain, the country has been severed from the European continent. On the secluded Holy Island, 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams, a newcomer with some sweetness and pluck) lives with his hunter father, Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), and bedridden mother, Isla (Jodie Comer).
The scene, with makeshift watchtowers and bows and arrows for weapons, is almost medieval. Jamie, too, feels almost like a knight eager to induct his son into the village's ways of survival. On Spike's first trip out off the island, his father — nauseatingly jocular — helps him kill his first infected. Back inside the village walls, Jamie celebrates their near scrapes and exaggerates his son's coolness under pressure. Other developments cause Spike to question the macho world he's being raised in.
'They're all lyin', mum,' he says to his mother.
After hearing of a far-off, supposedly deranged doctor whose constant fires mystify the townspeople, Spike resolves to take his mother to him in hopes of healing her unknown illness. Their encounters along the way are colorful. Ralph Fiennes plays the doctor, orange-colored when they encounter him; Edvin Ryding plays a Swedish NATO soldier whose patrol boat crashed offshore. Meanwhile, Comer is almost comically delusional, frequently calling her son 'Daddy.'
And the infected? One development here is that, while some remain Olympic-worthy sprinters, other slothful ones nicknamed 'Slow-Lows' crawl around on the ground, rummaging for worms.
Buried in here are some tender reflections on mortality and misguided exceptionalism, and even the hint of those ideas make '28 Years Later' a more thoughtful movie than you're likely to find at the multiplex this time of year. This is an unusually soulful coming-of-age movie considering the number of spinal cords that get ripped right of bodies.
It's enough to make you admire the stubborn persistence of Boyle in these films, which he's already extending. The already-shot '28 Days Later: The Bone Temple' is coming next near, from director Nia DaCosta, while Boyle hopes '28 Years Later' is the start of trilogy. Infection and rage, it turns out, are just too well suited to our times to stop now.
'28 Years Later,' a Sony Pictures release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for strong bloody violence, grisly images, graphic nudity, language and brief sexuality. Running time: 115 minutes. Two stars out of four.
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- Yahoo
28 YEARS LATER Cast and Crew on Returning to a Rage-Filled World
It hasn't been a full 28 years since 28 Days Later, but it's getting very close. We almost can't fully process just how influential and innovative the original movie was in 2002. Not only did it provide a jumpstart to the zombie (or zombie-like creature) genre, it gave the world fast-running hordes. Technologically, the movie's use of handheld digital cameras proved equally as cutting edge, even if it looks quite rough by today's standards. On returning to the story with 28 Years Later, director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland wanted to do more than just rehash. They wanted to explore the premise through a 2025 lens. Nerdist spoke to Boyle and Garland, as well as actors Jodie Comer and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, about 28 Years Later and blending family drama with rage-infected scares. 'I think we wanted to do something different,' Boyle told us. 'You have to be sensible. You are obviously basing it on the original movie. There is a debt that you hold and that you have to acknowledge, but we wanted to make it as minimal as possible. So much so that although we had Cillian [Murphy]'s agreement to be involved and he's part of [the later films] and that freed us up to try and make an original film with, like I said, a certain acknowledgement of the debt.' The movie's story, while still about people surviving a plague-destroyed landscape, is very different from the first movie. Great Britain has been completely quarantined from the rest of the world. Mainland Europe has managed to eradicate the rage virus, but no British person is allowed to leave. This means the people who live there have had to manage in a new agrarian society and fortify their communities. At the same time, the infected have had almost 30 years to evolve. 'We want to move them on through the 28 years time passage to see how they've evolved,' Boyle continued. 'To see how the infection, the virus has moved to survive itself. Just like the survivors have established a world that they built from zero about how they can survive without electricity, without technology. So the instinct was to be as original as possible, as much as possible throughout.' 'To me it's just sort of what life is like,' Garland said of the rest of the movie's world ignoring the plight of Britain. 'While we are talking right now, there are some incredibly serious conflicts happening at this exact moment and here we are talking about a movie release. The world does have a really eerie, slightly creepy ability to compartmentalize and does it very naturally.' 'What the film is doing,' he continued, 'is just putting Britain in the state of one of those sort of acknowledged but also concurrently forgotten. And yes, the world carries on, has Amazon drivers, has people augmenting their face with collagen or whatever it is they do, and just carrying on as per normal.' The reality, the normal, is a major part of the lives of the characters in the movie. The relative safety of the small, offshore community allows for the family drama element to come to the forefront. At the center, we find Jamie (Taylor-Johnson) prepared to take son Spike (Williams) on his first 'hunt,' while wife/mother Isla (Comer) remains largely bedridden with an unknown illness. 'I think the beauty of that is Alex Garland wrote a story where these characters are so rich,' Taylor-Johnson explained. 'On the page, it's a very intimate family drama. So I think you kind of just play into the reality of that and the groundedness. But it's weird. You don't almost play into the horror aspect. You're sort playing into the truth.' 'We also had a two week rehearsal period before we started shooting,' Comer added. 'Then our first week, at least, my first week on set, was in the house [together]. We went from the rehearsal room where Danny had set up the bedroom, we had all the props, and then we went straight into that set, which was amazing.' She continued, 'Danny would often play out multiple scenes in order to get momentum and to really create an energy on set. It worked, and I think the rehearsals helped all of us. It was great for us to meet each other, get familiar, and kind of create some history between us.' The society of the island also feels fully realized and the people have gone back to an older, more traditional existence. Boyle says this, too, reflects our own times. '[It's been] happening around the world over the last maybe 10 years,' the director continued. 'This tendency to look back to the glorious past and to imagine that one might be able to live there again. Faced with the lack of electricity and the lack of technology, they have almost naturally regressed back to us almost 1950s-type existence.' Part of that, he continued, was reverting to traditional gender roles. 'The boys and the girls have been separated and gender become identified again as your key roles are to do with your gender. So the boys are trained to fight and to kill and the girls to prepare the food at home. And it was just that looking backwards was really, I think a key part of the journey of the world building of them.' But Spike, as our lead character, doesn't fully conform. 'The boy has a decision to make by the end of the film,' Boyle explained. 'Will he return to his father as his father's whole role model suggests and steps into the footsteps of his father and life progresses in that way. Or will he try and find something else? He'll, of course, find out what he's going to step into is very, very dangerous indeed.' You can see the danger for yourself when 28 Years Later hits cinemas on Friday, June 20. Kyle Anderson is the Senior Editor for Nerdist. He hosts the weekly pop culture deep-dive podcast Laser Focus. You can find his film and TV reviews here. Follow him on Letterboxd.


Geek Girl Authority
an hour ago
- Geek Girl Authority
OUTRAGEOUS Recap: (S01E02) Episode 2
As we dive into the meat of the 1930s, Outrageous pulls no punches with the truths of the era. Britain's situation is dire. Germany, under Hitler, is on the rise, displaying power and unity (no pun intended) in the most grandiose and spectacular manner. The Mitfords are stretching the limits of familial solidarity, and something's gotta give. RELATED: Catch up with our recap of the Outrageous series premiere Outrageous, Episode 2 Episode 2 opens with the aftermath of Diana's (Joanna Vanderham) divorce and closes with Nancy's (Bessie Carter) whirlwind wedding. In the middle, there's a surprise engagement announced. Interestingly, the divorce makes Diana happier than the wedding will make Nancy. And the surprise engagement is unlikely to bear any matrimonial fruit. Oh, to be Pamela (Isobel Jesper Jones)… Courtesy of BritBox December 1932 Christmas is a somber affair at The Fortress. Diana's divorce has caught everyone in its blast. Society has deemed her a scarlet woman. Farve (James Purefoy) takes it personally and forbids the rest of the family from giving Diana any gifts, visiting, writing, or speaking to her. As he dictates these rules, he carves up the Christmas bird in a hackneyed fashion. Muv (Anna Chancellor) tries to redirect attention to the vegetables, but Farve begins ranting about Mosley (Joshua Sasse), declaring the man's name is not to be spoken in their house. Everyone agrees quickly, except Unity (Shannon Watson), who points out that Mosley might be Prime Minister one day. When Tom (Toby Regbo) states the British people won't accept a fascist government, she argues that fascism has restored Italy and might do the same in Germany. Incensed, Farve demands she stop talking of things she doesn't understand. She asks defiantly if she can't even express an opinion. He replies that she may once she has fought in the trenches and debated in the House of Lords, things that women cannot do. RELATED: TV Review: The Serpent Queen Season 2 Unity doesn't back down, and Farve dismisses her from the table. She looks for support from the rest of the family. Finding none, she takes a bite of vegetables, inciting Farve to scream at her to leave immediately. Outrageous Nancy bemoans Hamish's (James Musgrave) abandonment and resigns herself to life as a spinster. She sits, curled up in an armchair with a typewriter. Tom enters the study and announces that Hamish is back. He reports that Ollie spotted Hamish at the Ritz, missing Nancy like crazy. Before Nancy can dash off to his side, Tom tells her that he believes Hamish is gay. Nancy laughs it off, telling him that she and Hamish have discussed it, and Hamish categorically denies it. Tom stands firm, reminding her that he went to school with Hamish and admitting that he's been in bed with him himself. He says that it was a phase for him, but it wasn't for Hamish. Admitting he can't be certain, he tells Nancy that he told Hamish that unless he proposes to Nancy, he is not to contact her. RELATED: 15 Song Covers We Want to Hear on Bridgerton Outside, Farve fires a shotgun over and over at unharmed birds out of rage. Nancy advises avoiding direct confrontation when he's like this. May 1933 at Diana's Forbidden Residence Nancy visits 122 Eaton Square. She swans into Diana's sitting room, calling for a cup of tea. Diana sits stunned, having just learned that Mosley's wife is dead. Courtesy of BritBox At The Fortress, Unity, Jessica (Zoe Brough), and Deborah (Orla Hill) read the paper reporting on Lady Cynthia Mosley's death. She died at age 34 of peritonitis caused by a burst appendix, leaving behind three young children. The gossip column adds that Lady Cynthia had been unhappy for many months for undisclosed reasons. Directly below the article is a blurb about Diana's divorce with her picture. RELATED: Hair and Makeup Artist Jacquetta Levon Talks Incorporating Reality and Fantasy for The Serpent Queen Nancy visits with Diana, who confesses she didn't think Cynthia was bothered by Mosley and her relationship. From the beginning, Mosley was clear he'd never divorce Cynthia. Diana expected that she and Mosley would be lovers and nothing more. She has no interest in remarrying. Now that Mosley could remarry, Cynthia's sisters have gathered around him and his children, keeping him from seeing or contacting Diana. Nancy comforts Diana. Future Visions Jessica and Unity watch a newsreel at the cinema. Coverage of the Prince of Wales visiting the towns most affected by unemployment segues into images of Hitler speaking in Berlin. Unity is enraptured by Hitler. Outside, Jessica asks if she thinks it could happen in England. Unity hopes so, seeing fascism as the answer to the world's problems. Jessica insists communism is the way. Unity tells her that debate is one thing. They needed to get properly involved if they're ever going to do anything about the world. Nancy, Pamela, and Unity visit Diana, bringing Muv's Dundee Cake as a sign that the parents may be thawing towards Diana. Before tea is served, a buzzer rings. The housemaid announces Hamish Erkine to see Nancy. Diana directs her to show him in, then she and Pamela drag Unity away for a made-up appointment they're suddenly late for. RELATED: Members of the ton, read our Bridgerton recaps Hamish enters, and Nancy expects he's going to propose, especially after he says that Tom told him where to find her. Instead, he tells her he's engaged to marry Kit Dun. Once the shock passes, Nancy screams at him to get away from her. He leaves, and she dissolves into tears. That night, Diana and Nancy share a bed as the sisters are all staying over. Diana assures Nancy that she'll do better than Hamish. Nancy reminds her that she's nearly 29 years old, and 30 is the death knell for women's chances of marriage. Diana points out that she is going to court in the morning to finalize her divorce. They joke about growing old together, crotchety old maids in black dresses with alarming teeth, drinking sherry all day. Diana offers Nancy a sleeping pill and takes one herself. The Naughtiest Sister of All Unity walks alone through some backstreets and finds the British Union of Fascists headquarters. She signs up, professing an admiration for Mosley's book and speeches as well as a respect for the theoretical side of things she learned from Hitler and Mussolini's writings. Her impassioned speech impresses the recruiter. When she states her name, it catches everyone's attention. RELATED: Fantasy Books Bridgerton Fans Need to Read Nancy meets Joss (Will Attenborough) in a nightclub. He insists her relationship with Hamish went on too long and wasn't any good for her. Their conversation is interrupted by Peter Rodd (Jamie Blackley), a friend of Joss's. Joss leaves them to get to know each other. He chats her up and proposes flippantly. When she points out they don't know each other at all, he provides a sketch of his upbringing and explains he has a job with an American bank in The City. She gives him the notes on her life, but he tells her that his friendship with Joss and his acquaintance with Hamish have educated him on the details. He claims to have fancied her from afar for years, then kisses her and proposes again. Courtesy of BritBox Diana's New Direction At a private fencing club, Mosley finishes a match. Removing his mask, he greets Diana and explains he can't be seen in public with her. He explains he plans to summer in France with Cynthia's sister Alexandra so he can recharge after Cynthia's funeral and prepare for a political push in the fall. RELATED: Filmmaker Charley Feldman Is Truly Outrageous Diana takes a moment to calm her reaction and wishes him well. He calls for her to come back, but she walks out quickly. As she rushes down the stairs, she falls quite hard. After a moment of despair, she pulls herself together and leaves the building. Passionate Summer Activities Peter and Nancy picnic in the countryside. They discuss their sexual history. Nancy admits she's still a virgin, while Peter confesses he isn't. He reiterates his intention to marry her. Nancy's voiceover explains that Farve eventually forgave Diana. At the formerly-Forbidden Residence, Diana welcomes an excited Unity. Unity is using Diana as an alibi and her house as a changing station where she gets ready for her shift as a Fascist Party recruiter. Diana tells Unity she's planning to go to Germany to see how the country thrives under Hitler's regime. Unity jumps at the chance to join her. RELATED: My Lady Jane : Rob Brydon and Anna Chancellor Spill Their Parenting Secrets Nancy and Muv rush into a London gentleman's club where Peter and Farve are lunching. When they wait for the men, Muv tells Nancy how wrong young people are about marriage, warning that it doesn't bring happiness. Happiness takes work, patience, and sacrifice. Nancy's not listening as Farve arrives just then, serious-faced. Peter emerges behind him and gives her a thumbs-up sign. Farve congratulates them. Muv looks on, thoughtfully. The very next weekend , Peter and Nancy consummate their engagement. Finally . Nancy is distinctly underwhelmed by the experience. Post-coitus, they're having a smoke, and Peter reveals that he'd asked both families to provide a financial settlement for the marriage. Both families declined. He tells Nancy that their fortunes depend on her father continuing to pay her allowance and on her writing a best-selling novel. Before sneaking back to his room, he tells Nancy she looks old when she frowns. Nancy's frown deepens. September 1933 Diana and Unity attend Hitler's rally at Nuremberg. It makes a deep impression on both, but Unity is completely enraptured. As wedding preparations begin, Deborah begs Nancy to make her a bridesmaid. Nancy tells her that if she makes Deborah one, she has to make all of them bridesmaids. She (and Farve) can't afford five dresses. She bemoans how poor she and Peter are. Jessica fumes that she's not poor compared to most people in the country. She rants about how unfair the distribution of wealth is. RELATED: Read our My Lady Jane recaps Unity returns home from her trip with Diana. That night, Nancy overhears her regaling Jessica and Deborah with tales of the Nuremberg rally. Shocked, she insists Deborah leave so she isn't infected by Unity's Nazi-love. Left alone, Unity confides in Jessica that attending the rally inspired her. She sees herself downtrodden in the family, the way Germany was by Europe. Taping a small swastika flag to her wall, she vows to rise like Germany. In London, Mosley calls out to Diana as she's about to board a black cab. He goes to kiss her, but she recoils, reminding him that they're out in public. She tells him a bit about the Nuremberg rally, emphasizing how impressive Hitler is. Before she can leave, he confesses he loves her and only her. Thawing, she smiles, throws her arms around him, and kisses him. She invites him to ride in the cab with her. Playing House Nancy and Peter rent a house in the suburbs. Nancy sets to work cleaning it up all on her own. Diana visits and admires everything Nancy has done. Peter and Nancy are getting married the next day. Nancy expects Peter to come see the house after work. Diana congratulates Nancy, and Nancy comments on how content Diana looks now that she's back with Mosley. RELATED: TV Review: My Lady Jane Season 1 Diana asks if Nancy disapproves. Nancy admits she doesn't like the Black Shirt activities and marches. Diana offers to introduce her to Mosley so she can get to know him personally. Nancy accepts, agreeing to give him a chance. Peter arrives home, drunk and needing the toilet. Diana clears out to allow the nearly-newlyweds some space. Nancy sees to the slovenly Peter on the couch, who announces that he's quit his job. When asked how they'll pay the rent, he puts that in Nancy's court, mocking her comments about old-fashioned ideas of gender roles. He explains that he gambled on their first meeting and never thought she'd agree to marry him. She was the third woman he proposed to that week. Laughing at her folly, he curls up and falls asleep. Amazing What A Girl Will Do At the church the next day, a photographer takes photos of the family as they wait for Nancy and Farve to arrive. In the car, Nancy sits in silence. She has the driver stop the car for a moment, and then asks Farve if he likes Peter. Farve takes her hand and reminds her that it doesn't matter if he likes Peter or not. He offers to turn the car around if she's having doubts, promising that he'll sort everything out. She thanks him and decides to go through with it. RELATED: Read our Outrageous recaps Nancy's voiceover describes how her whole family pulled together to make her wedding a special occasion. It helped the family heal after Diana's divorce scandal. It would be the Mitfords' last hurrah for years to come. Nancy admits that she married Peter as the ultimate rebound relationship. As she walks down the aisle on Farve's arm, she pastes a grim grin on her face and faces her future. Outrageous streams on BritBox, with new episodes dropping every Wednesday. It's Horses Versus Magic Doors in THE LIBRARIANS: THE NEXT CHAPTER Episode 6 Sneak Peek Diana lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she invests her time and energy in teaching, writing, parenting, and indulging her love of all Trek and a myriad of other fandoms. She is a lifelong fan of smart sci-fi and fantasy media, an upstanding citizen of the United Federation of Planets, and a supporter of AFC Richmond 'til she dies. Her guilty pleasures include female-led procedurals, old-school sitcoms, and Bluey. She teaches, knits, and dreams big. You can also find her writing at The Televixen, Women at Warp, TV Fanatic, and TV Goodness.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ralph Fiennes on His Role in the Next Hunger Games Film
Attending the World Premiere of his new film '28 Years Later', Ralph Fiennes took a moment to discuss his upcoming role as President Coriolanus Snow in 'The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping' and how he hopes to honour the late Donald Sutherland. Ralph stars alongside Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Alfie Moon in this horror sequel, directed by the minds behind '28 Days Later', Danny Boyle and Alex Garland. '28 Years Later' is in cinemas Friday 20th June 2025.