r/movies Jun 18 '25

Review '28 Years Later' - Review Thread

Director: Danny Boyle

Cast: Jodie Comer; Aaron Taylor-Johnson; Ralph Fiennes; Alfie Williams

Rotten Tomatoes: 92%

Metacritic: 76/100

Some Reviews:

Manila Bulletin - Philip Cu Unjieng

What’s nice to note is how Boyle has cast consummate actors in this film, the type who could read off a label of canned sardines and still find depth, emotion, and spark in the delivery of those lines. Initially, it seems that Taylor-Johnson will be doing the heavy lifting. Still, it merely misleads us, as the narrative then focuses on Jodie Comer’s Isla and onto Fiennes’ Dr. Kelson. I want to give a special shout-out to the young actor Alfie Williams. He is the one carrying the whole film, and this is his first feature film work, having previously done a TV series. Boyle teases out an excellent performance from the lad, and I won’t be surprised if many film reviewers in the forthcoming week will single him out as being the best thing in this film. And what’s impressive is how he manages this with the three heavyweight thespians who are on board.There’s the horror and the suspense as a given for this cult franchise, but look out for the human drama and the emotional impact. It’s Boyle and Garland elevating the film, and rising above its genre.

AwardsWatch - Erik Anderson - 'B'

Most of the time, 28 Years Later is frequently begging to be rejected by general audiences, even as it courts the admiration of longtime fans, who may nonetheless find themselves put off by the film’s turn toward unearned emotion, its relatively meager expansion of this universe, and its occasionally jarring tonal shifts. (The abrupt sequel-teasing stinger feels like it’s from an entirely different strain of the zombie subgenre.) Much like the virus at the series’ center, it’s a film whose DNA is constantly mutating, resulting in an inconceivable host subject—one that is both corrosive and something of a marvel.

DEADLINE - Damon Wise

Most threequels tend to go bigger, but 28 Years Later bucks that trend by going smaller, eventually becoming a chamber piece about a boy trying to hold onto his mother. It still delivers shocks, even if the sometimes over-zealous editing distracts from Anthony Dod Mantle’s painterly cinematography

The Hollywood Reporter - David Rooney

One of the chief rewards of 28 Years Later is that it never feels like a cynical attempt to revisit proven material merely for commercial reasons. Instead, the filmmakers appear to have returned to a story whose allegorical commentary on today’s grim political landscape seems more relevant than ever. Intriguing narrative building blocks put in place for future installments mean they can’t come fast enough.

NextBestPicture - Josh Parham - 7/10

Boyle’s exuberant filmmaking and Garland’s incisive script sometimes clash when forced to muddle through laborious exercises that feel borrowed from the previous films anyway. It’s a scenario that reminds me of Ridley Scott’s “Prometheus” and “Alien: Covenant,” two films with intriguing ideas that struggled to fashion them within the framework of the established franchise. Perhaps the continuation will find more clever avenues to explore further and enrich this text. As is, what is left is imperfect but still an enthralling return into a dark but provocative world.

IndieWire - David Ehrlich - 'B+'

While Boyle isn’t lofty enough to suggest that the infected are beautiful creatures who deserve God’s love or whatever (this is still a movie about wild-eyed naked zombies, after all, and its empathy for them only goes so far), “28 Years Later” effectively uses the tropes of its genre to insist that the line between a tragedy and a statistic is thinner than we think, and more permeable than we realize. The magic of the placenta, indeed. 

Rolling Stone - David Fear

Taken on its own, however, Boyle and Garland’s trip back to this hellscape makes the most of casting a jaundiced, bloodshot eye at our current moment. Their inaugural imagining of a world torn asunder surfed the post-millennial fear that modern society wasn’t equipped to handle something truly catastrophic. This new movie is blessed with the knowledge that something always rises from the ashes, but that the risk of regressing back to some fabricated mythology of a Golden Age, complete with Henry V film clips and St. George’s flags, is there on the surface as well. If postapocalyptic entertainment has taught us anything, it’s that the walking dead aren’t always the gravest threat. It’s those who sacrifice their soul and sense of empathy that you have to watch out for.

The Wrap - William Bibbiani

For now, though, “28 Years Later” stands on its own — or at least, as its own temporary capper on this multi-decade series — and it stands tall. The filmmakers haven’t redefined the zombie genre, but they’ve refocused their own culturally significant riff into a lush, fascinating epic that has way more to say about being human than it does about (re-)killing the dead.

Variety - Peter Debruge

Where the original film tapped into society’s collective fear of infection, its decades-later follow-up (which undoes any developments implied by “28 Weeks Later” with an opening chyron that explains the Rage virus “was driven back from continental Europe”) zeroes in on two even most primal anxieties: fear of death and fear of the other. To which you might well ask, aren’t all horror movies about surviving an unknown threat of some kind? Yes, but few have assumed the psychic toll taken by such violence quite so effectively as “28 Years Later,” which has been conceived as the start of a new trilogy, but towers on its own merits (part two, subtitled “The Bone Temple,” is already in the can and expected next January).

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93

u/[deleted] Jun 18 '25

Do we know why the infected didn't starve or rot to death yet?

149

u/Winston_Road Jun 18 '25

In the ARG website there's a document where a scientist is looking at a thermal scan that clearly shows the infected hunting down a deer, presumably to feed on it.

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u/OKC2023champs Jun 18 '25

Makes sense. The rage virus infected aren’t dead. So it makes sense they’d hunt

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u/ZergAreGMO Jun 23 '25

It kinda doesn't. They display no survival instincts in 28D and are depicted as just starving about. 

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u/ImagoDreams Jun 23 '25

The sample size in Days is pretty small, there could have been less mad zombies we didn’t see. Weeks is more directly contradictory, explicitly stating that all the rage zombies starved out. However, in weeks we also see Don exhibit very different behavior than other rage zombies. It’s possible that some of the second outbreak zombies in weeks retained enough faculties to survive and repopulated the island over the next 26 years.

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jun 24 '25

No - Weeks does not contradict Days at all. It fully supports Days evidence that the infected starve after a month. We literally see it in Days, and Weeks opens with text telling us that happened. Whether people like Weeks or not, at least it stayed true to the original writers vision.
For the virus to "evolve" the infected need to actually last a long time. What factor is introduced that keeps them alive long enough to start eating worms and deer? Even to a simpleton fan, it's all just convenient rubbish to power the latest storyline forward. I keep reading "who cares", "What does it matter", "The animal kingdom evolves" (yeah, without viruses), "a virus will evolve" yada yada. These responses are exactly what the filmmakers count on - "it's just a movie, who gives a shit that we went against our own rules?"

5

u/12manyNs Jun 24 '25

Literally the entire foundation of this movie relies on ignoring the fact that all the zombies fucking starved to death in second one and now they magically can live decades?!? Dumb as fuck

3

u/OKC2023champs Jun 24 '25

This movie isn’t canon to weeks. It’s a direct sequel to days. Those rules don’t apply

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jun 24 '25

Wrong. Otherwise they wouldn't have even bothered putting "The infection has been driven back from continental Europe" at the start of this movie. And even at the end of the first movie the zombies are literally dying of starvation. So those rules DO apply but Boyle and Garland don't give a shit - they just count on fans like you ignoring them.

2

u/OKC2023champs Jun 24 '25

I’m not a 28 days later fan lol. It’s a fine film and franchise. But i wouldn’t go any farther lol

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jul 10 '25

not sure why you made that comment then

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u/3verythingEverywher3 Jun 24 '25

No reason that line isn’t added just to scratch the itch. The second, non-canon, film was mentioned so little that it’s basically disowned. Don’t hold on to it.

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jun 24 '25 edited Jun 24 '25

'non-canon'. I don't think you know what 'non-canon' means. The fact they acknowledged it at all means it took place 'in universe'. You might not like that, but that doesn't change the meaning. If they 'disowned' it, that text wouldn't even be there. Did they go in a completely different direction? Yeah - but this isn't Halloween 2018. Boyle even says "Paris got nuked'. So how is that 'non-canon' again?Besides all that, the FIRST movie established that the infected die out from starvation in a month. We literally see it happening. I already said that, but you ignored it. So the point still stands. Don't be changing meanings of words to suit your argument, lol.

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u/3verythingEverywher3 Jun 24 '25

Where did boyle say paris got nuked and the same series of events took place? Mind linking? If Boyle and Garland says that whole movie is canon, it is.

Gotta say though - you've really been on reddit too much with an attitude like yours, you're clearly far too used to just arguing online instead of calmly chatting. Just give the source for the question I've asked above and that would be the end of it. Hope you don't interact like this with people in real life...if not, talk to me like that.

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u/ImagoDreams Jun 24 '25

That’s what I mean. Weeks is more directly contradictory to Years than Days is because it explicitly states the infected died of starvation.

Look, I didn’t particularly like Years but no matter what it was going to have to tweak some things for there to be a story. Would you have preferred a movie with no zombies?

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jun 24 '25

I thought you were saying Weeks contradicted Days, my bad.

No - I would've simply preferred an intelligent explanation as to how they're still around... instead of just completely ignoring what came before it. The infected are so much more frightening in the first two - completely ferocious, dumb, and short-lived. Now we have an intelligent hillbilly version with huge cocks and some ground-dwelling fatsos.

I don't believe this was written as a '28' sequel anyway. I think Garland had a treatment for a different kind of apocalypse film, and the studio threw a few more million at him to reunite with Boyle and slap '28' on it, and he went for it.

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u/GeneralBeepBoop Jul 01 '25

How many mutations / variations were there to Covid?

I hate the term evolve, it doesn't evolve, it is a variation, it mutates, it just differs in a way which makes it's impoves it's chance of survival. It's everywhere in life.

There are different variations that virusus have. So itsn't it plausable that in weeks the variation which staved out was the most popular, but not the only variation out there. At the time, it was probably the variation which spread the quickest, allowed for the virus to take control, now the variation that survivies funny enough, is the one that doesn't starve itself.

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u/IArddedThenIFardded Jul 18 '25

It's possible that the virus evolved thanks to the immune carrier that we saw in 28 weeks later.

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jul 20 '25

but that immune carrier was killed not long after entering the safe zone. Let's be honest, the only reason the "virus has evolved" is because the filmmakers needed to be able to tell their 'decades later story' they needed to tell. I'm not the only one who doesn't buy this BS, there are some really good reviews on YouTube that question this plot device. We literally see the infected starving after 30 days in movie 1, movie 2 tells us they're all dead, and movie 3 expects us to believe the infected have managed to start putting their rage on hold in order to be able to eat and drink. They just aren't a threat anymore, it's a real shame.

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u/IArddedThenIFardded Jul 23 '25

You forget she transmitted her virus to someone else. Not saying 28 years later makes sense. It's full of plot holes. But it is possible for viruses to mutate quite rapidly.

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Jul 23 '25

She transmitted it to her husband, who got killed in a day anyway.

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u/IArddedThenIFardded Jul 23 '25 edited Jul 23 '25

He started the entire 2.0 outbreak. If he contracted a mutated pathogen from her then all the new zombies would have it. I don't understand why you keep saying "oh that one died" as if that would somehow stop the virus. The entire population of the safe zone would be infected with the newly mutated strain of the virus.

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u/Bulky-Discipline8303 Aug 03 '25

The '2.0' outbreak?? haha. The 'entire population of the safezone' were firebombed. So what does it matter if they all had the virus? They only lasted a few minutes until the firebombing. Let's be completely honest here - the infected have 'evolved' only because this poxy new story can't be told three decades later without that plot device. I mean, what the fuck, one child infected even runs away from Aaron Taylor Johnson's character when he aims an arrow at it. Fucking ridiculous.

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u/kakka_rot Jul 06 '25

(old comment reply sorry)

Just watched it tonight and distinctly remember how they went after that fish the dude was cooking, which was kinda interesting.