REVIEW

Movie Review: 28 Weeks Later

Written by Dread Central
Published May 11, 2007

By Andrew Kasch

In a year of non-stop disappointments, who could’ve guessed that the film to deliver the goods would be a big studio sequel to a low budget indie foreign flick? Yet, here it is with the arrival of 28 Weeks Later


The original 28 Days Later was a stylish and intelligent film that gave a welcome focus on characters while re-inventing the whole zombie movie aesthetic. It was far from perfect with a plot that rehashed George Romero’s Dead series (complete with third act Rhodes and Bub clones), but it was still a major achievement in the realm of indie horror. The film’s anti-climax didn’t exactly cry out for a sequel, but you can thank the movie gods that we got one anyway. Ready for another shocker? 28 Weeks Later is a bloodier, scarier, and arguably better film than the original. Much like Dawn of the Dead or Aliens, this is the very model of what a sequel should be: a film that expands on the universe of the first without rehashing it.

28 Weeks Later Review by Dread CentralThe story picks up twenty-eight weeks (duh!) after the initial outbreak of the rage virus. All the infected have starved to death, and authorities have begun repopulating the cities. Survivors are screened through rigorous medical tests and herded into military “safe zones” in the heart of London, among them family man Don (Robert Carlyle) and his two children. No sooner do they settle into their new digs than a sudden outbreak of the virus finds its way back into the populace. The infected once again run rampant through the city streets so the panicked armed forces do the only thing they know — blow the shit out of everything in sight. It’s up to the ever-diminishing group of survivors to find a way out of the forbidden zone before they’re annihilated by either the new infected or the trigger-happy military.

28 Weeks Later Review by Dread CentralWhat makes 28 Weeks Later so amazing is how it takes the time to establish atmosphere, exploring the survivors, their surroundings, and their new way of life. The ruined militarized streets of London perfectly set the tone, and when all hell finally breaks loose, it never lets up, bounding from one blistering scene to the next.

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Movie Review: 28 Weeks Later
Published: May 11, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Horror
Writer: Dread Central
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Comments

#1 — May 11, 2007 @ 17:54PM — Lisa McKay [URL]

Congratulations! This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States, and Boston.com, which will allow even more readers to enjoy it.

#2 — May 12, 2007 @ 13:57PM — DukeDeMondo [URL]

ooooh nice. Excellent review, Andrew. i must admit that i was none too excited at all about the prospect of a Boyle-less sequel (i'm sure there plenty of Boils to make up for it. God that was awful), but with every review i read, the spark of anticipation swells that bit further back the throat. I'm near chokin on a desire to see the bugger now. and oooh, LOVELY screenshot up thonner.

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