Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later: Starting Over - Page 3

The early parts are a survivalist fantasy coming on the heels of a destruction and re-creation myth. The way Boyle and Garland treat the survivalist fantasy allows the actors to create specific characters out of potentially overburdened types, and the movie works through the details of what they'd encounter, how they'd deal with it. But once the situation at the camp goes Gothic, it's time to start analyzing the narrative tropes and the fun's pretty much over.

For instance, at first the destruction and re-creation myth seems to carry an ironic charge because the consequences of the animal rights' activists were unforeseen by them, and, at a higher level of irony, because it wasn't an angry God who had destroyed the world to punish his creatures for their sins, as with the flood in Genesis 6:1-8. The situation seems clean--there's no reason for it. It's bracing to be reminded that a rampaging virus could take humans back into the realm of nature where we would lose our dominance; I think in the very long run this must prove true, though perhaps not by means of a virus. But finally you have to realize that there is a punishing moralism at work in 28 Days Later. Implicitly the movie is saying we deserve to die because we do such things as experiment on chimpanzees, and once we get to the compound with wacked-out military men, you know the movie has had the paranoid-left filter in from the start in order to make advanced civilization look barbaric (Major Henry West).

In this interview with UnderGroundOnline the producer Andrew Macdonald offers a sampling of the connections you could make from the situations in the movie, which only points up the intellectual clutter:

UGO: Did you have any fear of this film coming out after anthrax and SARS scares?

AM: Well, this film was done pre-Sept 11. But in the United Kingdom, we've had this foot and mouth disease. There were piles of burning animal carcasses on television. We seem to be becoming the leader of these kinds of diseases in the world. Genre films like this come out of fears like that; Omega Man coming out of the Cold War and Romero's films coming out of the Vietnam War.

UGO: Danny described this movie as the worst possible case of road rage.

AM: It's all about being intolerant. When Danny read the first draft, to him, it was a film about human rage. A psychological virus. The virus has been growing inside people. Everyone wants everything now. There are more and more cars and less and less room. Someone who doesn't move fast enough will get beaten up. It's the same in hospitals when they don't get served enough. It's an instability and intolerance that we have more and more in the west.

"Someone who doesn't move fast enough will get beaten up"? "It's the same in hospitals"? What the hell is he talking about? It all sounds vaguely plausible if you're skimming, but in the end he says too much, verging on free association. Most importantly, none of it feels necessary as an explanation of your experience of the movie.

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Article Author: Alan Dale

Alan Dale earned a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Princeton University and a J.D. from Yale Law School. He currently works as a corporate tax attorney in Portland, Oregon.

He is the author of What We Do Best: American Movie Comedies …

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