
Survivors leave the sanctuary of a safe island to explore the infected
mainland 28 years after the initial outbreak.
Review by
Eric Hillis
Directed by: Danny Boyle
Starring: Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jack O'Connell, Alfie Williams, Ralph
Fiennes

Following the conclusion of the original run of
Planet of the Apes movies in the '70s, European cinemagoers
were surprised to find a new batch of
Planet of the Apes movies arriving in their local picture
palaces. These new movies weren't actually movies at all, but two episodes
of the Planet of the Apes TV show stitched together to fill
a feature length running time. 28 Years Later, director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland's belated
(or five years early?) third instalment of their not-zombie franchise,
might be mistaken for two episodes of The Walking Dead glued
together and released into cinemas.
The series finds itself a victim of its own success. 2002's
28 Days Later spawned the 2000s/2010s zombie craze that
would give us Zack Snyder's Dawn of the Dead (which borrowed
28's fast-moving zoms), a second zombie trilogy from George A. Romero,
countless parodies spearheaded by Shaun of the Dead, and a slew of post-apocalyptic TV shows, most notably
The Walking Dead (whose pilot episode blatantly copied the
opening of 28 Days Later) and its multiple spin-offs. You might even argue that the zombie craze
and its post-apocalyptic crossover appeal allowed George Miller to return
to the world of Mad Max. As such, there's very little in 28 Years Later that we
haven't seen before. Its most interesting elements aren't on the screen,
but bubbling beneath the surface.

As the title suggests, it's 28 years since the outbreak of a virus that
turned its victims into homicidal maniacs (an idea taken from Romero's
The Crazies but most successfully portrayed in the underseen
1984 thriller Impulse). The first two movies contradictorily created confusion regarding
whether the virus had spread beyond Britain, so opening text here makes it
clear that it was driven out of continental Europe and confined to a
quarantined Britain. In a not-so-subtle allusion to Brexit, Britain has
been left to rot.
The first movie was heavily derivative, mashing up classic British
dystopian TV shows like Survivors and
The Changes with Romero's The Crazies and
Day of the Dead, and 28 Years Later continues this trend. From Romero's
Survival of the Dead it lifts the idea of survivors living
on an island off the mainland, in this case Holy Island off the North East
coast of England. Just like the island from
The Woman in Black, Holy Island is joined to the mainland by a causeway that submerges at
high tide. Here we find our young protagonist, 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), who lives with his macho father Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson)
and his bedridden mother Isla (Jodie Comer, adding Geordie to her
impressive roster of accents). As a coming-of-age ritual, Spike is brought
to the mainland by his father for his first "hunt," where he's expected to
fire arrows into the necks of the infected.

On the mainland we're introduced to a concept new to this series, albeit
one cogged from Romero's Land of the Dead, that of an "Alpha" zombie who leads the herd with his extra
intelligence. Now shed of their clothes, the infected here look like the
cannibals of a '70s Italian exploitation flick, and the Alpha (Chi Lewis-Parry) resembles Luigi Montefiore in Joe D'Amato's infamous stomach-churner
Anthropophagus, but with Dirk Diggler's prosthetic schlong flapping about between his
knees. Along with the infected, the mainland is also home to Kelson (Ralph Fiennes, who seems to be steadily morphing into Leonard Rossiter with each new
performance), a doctor dismissed as a mad quack by the islanders.
Desperate for help for his mother, Spike drags Isla back to the mainland
in search of this Kurtzian figure.
The action of 28 Years Later is rather underwhelming, and
it doesn't help that Boyle, ever the fidgeter, uses distracting techniques
like brief freeze frames in the middle of what should be kinetic action
sequences. For a movie about a young boy and a sickly woman trudging
through a zombie-infested wasteland, there's a curious lack of peril here.
As an action-horror hybrid, this third entry fails to replicate the better
moments of its predecessors, neither of which were all that great to begin
with.

Where Boyle and Garland's film does succeed is as an interrogation of
modern Britain's place in the world. It would be all too easy for a
liberal filmmaker to cruelly gloat at the dire situation these people now
find themselves in, but Boyle has always been a humanist first filmmaker.
There's a heartfelt compassion for these poor bastards who have been
abandoned by the world. You don't have to be British to be moved by the
sight of the Angel of the North still standing amid overgrown foliage, or
the Sycamore Gap tree, felled by vandals in 2023 but still standing in
this alternate timeline (even my cold Irish heart was moved by the thought
of what such iconography means to the English).
Much of the weight of this subtext is carried by the revelatory Williams,
whose eyes carry a deep sadness but also a resilience. When a stranded
Swedish NATO soldier (Edvin Ryding) mocks the primitive nature of
the English of this world, it's the hurt on Williams' face that ensures we
take the side of this downtrodden young English boy rather than the
mocking European sophisticate. At a time when Britain's politics are
dominated by some of the worst people in the world,
28 Years Later reminds us that the Brits are essentially
good people, but also that they have a tendency to be lead astray by bad
faith figureheads. This latter idea is introduced in the film's closing
scene, a bonkers trump card that will ensure anyone familiar with the dark
side of British pop culture will be returning for the next instalment,
2026's 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple.

28 Years Later is in UK/ROI cinemas
from June 20th.