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28 Days Later

United Kingdom

2002

113 Min
Color
Spanish, English
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Danny Boyle

PROD Andrew Macdonald

SCR Alex Garland

DP Anthony Dod Mantle

CAST Cillian Murphy, Naomie Harris, Noah Huntley, Brendan Gleeson, Megan Burns

MUSIC John Murphy

Synopsis

Animal rights activists free a group of infected chimpanzees to horrifying results in this speculative sci-fi horror effort from Trainspotting director Danny Boyle. Waking from a coma in a deserted London hospital 28 days later, bicycle courier Jim (Cillian Murphy) takes to the deserted city streets in a state of mystified confusion. Joining forces with another group of survivors following a terrifying encounter in a seemingly abandoned church, Jim soon learns the truth behind the deserted streets and the menacing creatures that lurk in the shadows. It’s soon revealed that the chimpanzees had been harboring a deadly virus that sends its victims into a furious, murderous rage, and in the days following the initial exposure, the entire population was nearly wiped out due to the resulting homicidal rampage. Is there still a glimmer of hope for humanity — or has the deadly “rage” virus found its way to foreign shores and infected the entire planet? —allmovie guide

Director

Danny-boyle

Danny Boyle

With an eclectic array of films to his credit, director Danny Boyle emerged from his native England to become one of the most celebrated and revered filmmakers of independently-minded cinema. Ever since his emergence onto the world stages with “Trainspotting” (1996), his stark, but viciously funny look at a group of heroin-addicted friends living in Edinburgh, Boyle managed to chart his own unique path without having to bow to studio pressures. Though he dipped his toe into Hollywood waters with his underwhelming adaptation of “The Beach” (2000), Boyle nonetheless created frenzied and highly-stylized films that also depicted three-dimensional characters often struggling with human vices and weakness. With his luminously praised horror film, “28 Days Later” (2003), and his surprisingly soft-hearted children’s fantasy, “Millions” (2005), Boyle proved adept at shifting genres without losing the voice he established in his previous efforts, making him one of the most talented and eagerly… read more

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Pedro Manoel

27Jan10

A really good zombie movie! You end up being really involved with the characters. I like how the movie focus on the lives of those 4 characters, and the situation outside the plot keeps unknown to the audience. Many people don't like that, but I enjoy this because it keeps the focus on the character development. I recommend, if you enjoy a good zombie outbreak!  
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Lobster Johnson

4Dec09

Scary zombies = the scariest shit ever.  
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Edwin N

27Nov09

Danny Boyle's only watchable film. An excellent resurrection of the zombie genre, it's fascinating how it's approached in a semi-documentary way. Murphy is great as always.  

gino

4Nov09

28 Days Later is surprisingly good. There are so many Zombie Films out there that ultimately fall flatter than flat. Boyle created a Masterpiece with this one though; it deals with more than just the living dead, but also with the emotions and boundaries of the living. The second half of the Film is incredibly emotional and becomes something far greater than the typical horror flick.  

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Untitled

By Jared Mobarak on June 8, 2009

In anticipation for the sequel 28 Weeks Later, I decided to revisit the superb zombie entry 28 Days Later from director Danny Boyle. I remember back to when I first started hearing the buzz about this…  read review

Untitled

By Sam Cooper on June 1, 2009

28 Days Later is one of my favorite horror movies, hell, one of my all time favorite movies. In a time of remakes (reboots, re-imaginings, whatever the studio’s now disguise them as) and recycled hash…  read review

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