Product Description
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28 Days Later
Hailed as the most frightening film since The Exorcist, accled
director Danny Boyle's visionary take on zombie horror "isn't
just y…it's absolutely terrifying" (Access Hollywood). An
infirmary patient awakens from a coma to an empty room…in a
vacant hospital…in a deserted city. A powerful virus, which locks
victims into a permanent state of murderous rage, has transformed
the world around him into a seemingly desolate wasteland. Now a
handful of survivors must fight to stay alive, unaware that the
worst is yet to come…
28 Weeks Later
The film pick up six months after the Rage virus has spread
throughout the city of London. The United States Army has
restored order and is repopulating the quarantined city, when a
carrier of the Rage virus enters London and unknowingly
re-ignites the spread of the deadly infection, wreaking havoc on
the entire population. The virus is not yet dead, and this time
it's more dangerous than ever.
.co.uk Review
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28 Days Later
The director/producer team that created Trainspotting turn their
dynamic cinematic imaginations to the classic science fiction
scenario of the last people on Earth. Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes
up from a coma to find London deserted--until he runs into a mob
of crazed plague victims. He gradually finds other still-human
survivors (including Naomie Harris), with whom he heads off
across the abandoned countryside to find the source of a radio
broadcast that promises salvation. 28 Days Later is basically an
updated version of The Omega Man and other post-apocalyptic
visions; but while the movie may lack originality, it makes up
for it in vivid details and creepy paranoid atmosphere. 28 Days
Later's portrait of how people behave in extreme
circumstances--written by novelist Alex Garland (The Beach)--will
haunt you afterward. Also featuring Brendan Gleeson (The General,
Gangs of New York) and Christopher Eccleston (Shallow Grave, The
Others). --Bret Fetzer
28 Weeks Later
As an exercise in pure, unadulterated terror, 28 Weeks Later is a
worthy follow-up to its accled predecessor, 28 Days Later. In
this ultraviolent sequel from Spanish director Juan Carlos
Fresnadillo (hired on the strength of his 2001 thriller Intacto),
over six months have passed since the first film's apocalyptic
vision of London overrun by infectious, plague-ridden zombies.
Just when it seems the "rage virus" has been fully contained, and
London is in the process of slowly recovering, an extremely
unfortunate couple (Robert Carlyle, Catherine McCormack) is
attacked by a small band of rampaging "ragers," and the cowardly
husband escapes while his wife is attacked and presumably
infected. Their surviving children (Imogen Poots, Mackintosh
Muggleton) fall under the protection of a U.S. Army sharpshooter
(Jeremy Renner), but nobody's safe for long as 28 Weeks Later
goes into action-packed overdrive, with scene after blood-gushing
scene of carnage and decimation. The film's visuals follow the
look established in 28 Days Later, this time with bigger and
better scenes of a nearly abandoned London on the brink of utter
destruction. The subplot gets a bold assist from Harold
Perrineau (as a daring helicopter pilot) and Idris Elba (in a
too-brief role as the commander), and their
firepower--not to mention the efficient lethality of helicopter
blades--turns 28 Weeks Later into a nonstop bloodbath that's way
too intense for younger viewers and guaranteed to leave hardcore
horror fans gruesomely satisfied. That's all there is to it--this
film is almost plotless and dialogue is minimal throughout--but
as a truly terrifying vision of survival amidst chaos, 28 Weeks
Later honours its origins. Could there be another sequel? Thanks
to the "chunnel," the answer in this case is definitely oui.
--Jeff Shannon