2002
Rated: R for graphic violence, horrific scenes of violence, nudity, graphic language and adult themes.
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy, Thriller and Art/Foreign
Directed By: Danny Boyle
Running Time: 1:48
Review by: Felix Vasquez Jr.
Review Date: 7/06/03
DVD Features:
Audio Commentary - 1. Danny Boyle - Director, Alex Garland - Writer
3 Alternate Endings
Deleted Scenes
Featurette - 1. "Pure Rage: The Making of 28 Days Later"
Music Video - 1. Jacknife Lee
Theatrical Teaser
Theatrical Trailer
Production Stills Gallery w/ Director Commentary
Polaroid Picture Gallery w/ Director Commentary
Animated Storyboards
28 DAYS LATER

 


Jim: What do you mean there's no government?! There's always a government!

After animal rights terrorists invade a science lab, they begin breaking monkey's free from their cages despite the frantic warnings from a scientist and are violently attacked by the apes that tear them apart and infect them. 28 days later, a man awakes from a coma in a hospital bed to discover a desolate and trashed hospital before him. He begins to inspect the marvel before him as the entire city of Britain is empty with no one in sight. He stumbles upon an empty church in which he is attacked by a priest who violently charges him and as he flees many others begin chasing him. He runs into survivor's who save him and tell him a virus has broken free on the general population and mankind as he knows it ceases to exist. The results of the virus are the infected. People who growl with beaming red eyes that run at almost lightning speeds and kill anything in their path and infect others by tearing them apart or vomiting blood on them. It only takes twenty seconds to become one, so they waste no time disposing of their friends.

They stumble upon father and daughter survivors who decide to travel a military base where they supposedly have everything under control, but what they will find is not what they will expect. Occasionally within the throws of watered down horror movies and thrillers, a movie and a director comes along and decides to completely re-write the way horror is done. Danny Boyle is one of those people who will undoubtedly change horror movies. Danny Boyle is brilliant because after directing freaky cult films like "Trainspotting", it was a bit questionable to me if he could handle horror but he pulls it off well. The movie constantly changes into pastels of moods within it's canvas setting constantly going from light moods, ala the shopping scene, instantly cranking up the tension, ala the tunnel sequence. He can leave us smiling with delight and in a split second leave us biting our nails and cringing in our seats.

He relies a lot on isolation to scare us, showing massively long scenes of lonely landscapes forcing us to feel even more terror and insecurity. He goes for a long time without giving us any type of horror as we watch the characters interact with one another and cooperate within this post-apocalyptic world without anyone. Then, suddenly, he throws a lot of horror and gore at us relentlessly which makes it scarier because the violence is so rare that when it comes it's more terrifying.  

He dares to break the mold of the horror genre by masterfully giving us a range of moods and colors, and terrifying sequences non-stop. A lot of this movie reminded me of a Dario Argento film with the shocking opener that lets you know what's in store for you. The movie actually gives us characters we can care about and the director helps us by exploring the psychological effects this horror is having on them. We see Jim, the coma patient, have dreams that he is alone and deserted; we can see the desperation within the father's eyes, and the torment in the daughter's. These are actually characters that we feel bad for and within a split second Boyle takes them away from us. Characters in this movie come and go and Boyle snatches them without hesitation. Boyle often drops the characters off in small cramped dark places making the audience even more nervous and more anxious as we know terror is looming but we can do nothing about it. The infected are horrifying as they stare with beaming red eyes and bloody faces and growl aloud; they can run and jump and dash and never stop. They also can infect someone by scratching them or vomiting oozing red blood all over the person which infects their victim within a matter of seconds, twenty seconds.

Zombie movies have long drawn out sequences where we know someone is infected by the zombie and it takes them forever to change, but this wastes no time and instantly amps up the tension factor. We witness the transformation before our eyes and watch as they spasm and hiss and turn instantly. The movie is more of a commentary on humanity and how we never really learn from our mistakes. We watch four people forced to live and exist in a world without order, a world with carnage, a world not very different from ours. When the people save Jim and explain that the government is basically non-existent he replies "What do you mean there's no government? There's always a government!" This forces them act upon themselves and begs the questions: In a world without order, how do you achieve it? Who decides what life should be like, and is it all ultimately futile? This shows what humans do when there's no structure or basis for order and basically take it upon themselves to do it with unsuccessful results. The last twenty minutes of the movie is very gory and very intense as the entire movie comes to a close with bloody results, results that will leave you cringing and covering your eyes. I was often covering my eyes and groaning in fear as the last moments of the movie pretty much sum up the entire story in a very horrifying fashion. Danny Boyle got it right and proves he's an elite director that has yet to achieve the fame he so rightly deserves.

Danny Boyle is a genius director and might as well have re-invented the horror genre. One of the scariest movies I've ever seen, this is entertaining, horrifying and is sure to be a classic. Bravo Mr. Boyle, bravo.

  • The exteriors of the streets of London were shot in the early hours of the morning on weekdays. The crew only had a couple of minutes each day, and crew members had to politely ask clubbers not to walk onto the streets.
  • The only words spoken by an infected person in the movie are, "I hate you," said by the boy in the cheeseburger stand right before Jim kills him.
  • Horror novelist 'Stephen King' bought out an entire showing of the film in New York City.
  • Leonardo DiCaprio was offered the role of Jim.
  • Tilda Swinton was offered the role of Selena, but passed.
  • Ewan McGregor was the original choice to play Jim.

 

 

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