28 Days Later
Four Stars (out of five)
2003. Released by 20th Century Fox Home Video. Running time 113 minutes. Rated R for violence and gore, as well as nudity. Closed captions, and English subtitles. Has commentary with the director and screen writer, deleted scenes, and two alternate endings. There's also "Pure Rage" a documentary on the making of the film and a Jacknife Lee music video.

Jeepers creepers, where'd you get those peepers? Animal rights activists break into a British lab to rescue chimps that have been experimented on. The researchers are trying to find a cure for rage, an emotion that causes a lot of death and destruction. So the chimps have been infected with an inhibitor that suppresses all normal restraints on their rage in an effort to see if they can find a way to contain it. Despite the pleas of a lab worker not to release the chimps, the activists do just that, releasing a chimp from its sealed Plexiglas cage--only to have it savagely attack one of the activists, viciously biting her. The activists quickly kill the chimp, and the lab worker tries to kill the now-infected activist, but it is too late. She already spat in the face of one of her comrades, instantly infecting him...and so the contagion begins its deadly spread across England.

28 days later, a coma patient named Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up in an abandoned hospital. A bicycle courier who was the victim of a hit and run, he has basically slept through the end of the world. After wandering the streets of a deserted London, he meets Mark (Noah Huntley) and Selena (Naomie Harris), two survivors of the rage plague who have become adept at battling the Infected. As Jim learns firsthand when Mark gets bitten in an attack, once a person is bitten by one of the Infected, it takes 10 to 20 seconds for them to become one of them. The Infected are known by their blood-red eyes and by the fact that they exist in a constant state of primal rage. All higher brain functions have been eliminated in favor of the most base, instinctive feelings, which is mainly to rip people apart for food. This is a far different and more realistic interpretation of the old zombie myth of the re-animated dead; the Infected are still very much alive, but they are still zombie-like in that all civilized thoughts are suppressed in favor of their murderous, ravenous behavior. And unlike the lumbering, shambling zombies of other horror films, the Infected move very fast, and just one drop of their blood is enough to infect you.

I wonder what time it is? Directed by Danny Boyle. And written by Alex Garland, 28 Days Later is a superb horror film. It basically deals with the grim realities of day-to-day survival where civilization is a thing of the past, in a land where cities and towns are just as much as dead as the majority of their citizens. Shot on a moderate budget, it still manages to tell its bleak story very effectively, with plenty of visceral shock moments that make you jump out of your seat. And on top of this, 28 Day Later is still handled intelligently, and populated with characters that you really care about. Brenden Gleason and Megan Burns are also great as a father and daughter whom Jim and Selena meet up with.

The DVD includes a commentary by Boyle and Garland, deleted scenes, and two alternate endings. There's a great "making of" documentary called "Pure Rage", which examines the all too real threat of a pandemic, as well as the making of the film. --SF

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