28 Years Later sees Danny Boyle re-animate his 'infected' in 28 Days Later sequel
It hasn't quite been 28 years since a bleary-eyed Cillian Murphy drifted onto the streets of a deserted London, in 2002's 28 Days Later, which redefined the zombie film for a new millennium.
What: A 12-year-old member of a secluded island community ventures into zombie-infected Britain.
Starring: Alfie Williams, Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson
Directed by: Danny Boyle
Likely to make you feel: Like the wait was worth it
Danny Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland flooded Britain with a 'rage virus' that evolved the undead from a shuffling, slow-burn threat into a frenzied foe. Its frenetic editing and MiniDV cinematography established the visual hallmarks for a paranoid era of post-9/11 horror.
The timing of the film's sequel, 28 Years Later, now in Australian cinemas, feels apt.
Zombie films have found major commercial success in recent decades but, creatively, they've stalled.
The fast zombies and gritty survivalist narrative of Boyle's original film have been endlessly recycled. It's telling that the most popular example of the genre, HBO's The Last of Us, is an adaptation of a 2013 video game.
If the apocalypse was a fun hypothetical to consider in the early 2010s — the peak of zombie saturation — the pandemic has made societal collapse a more immediate reality.
Boyle, now 68 years old, has lost little of the apoplectic fury that charged his pioneering classic.
28 Years Later begins on a secluded island whose inhabitants have successfully weathered the few decades since the rage virus broke containment. The fortified community is connected to mainland Britain via a low-lying coastal path, where villagers go to gather resources — and, in the case of 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), score a first infected kill.
As part of his coming-of-age rite, Spike's father, Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Nosferatu), accompanies him for his first encounter with the undead. Their mission quickly goes sideways when they encounter an Alpha, a mutated variant with colossal strength and a pack of underlings under command.
The mainland is also revealed to be home to Ian Kelson (Ralph Fiennes, Conclave), a doctor branded as a madman by the villagers for his unconventional handling of the undead but, potentially, the only hope for Spike's mother, Isla (Jodie Comer, Killing Eve), whose mind and body have been wracked by a mysterious disease.
The first stretch of the film is an effectively nervy exercise in folk horror but it's not immediately clear why, after so many years, Boyle and Garland decided to revisit this world.
Save for some flashes of clever world-building (the village being comprised of die-hard Queen Liz royalists is a bleakly hilarious touch), the expanded scope of 28 Years Later initially stays confined to well-trodden genre territory. Cultish enclaves are a persistent rash in the post-apocalypse, while the virus's Alpha mutation is a cliché better suited to video games. One of the early surprises is that, with the scarcity of human flesh, some of the sprinting zombies of yore have now been reduced to a crawl.
The transition from MiniDV's hypnotically hazy textures to iPhone cinematography makes for an intriguing stylistic refresh, if not a revolutionary one.
In the hands of returning DP Anthony Dod Mantle (who steered the early digital innovations of the Dogme 95 movement), the iPhone 15 Max footage lends an eerie unreality to the film, visible in its deep focus, wide angles and sharp edges, the horizon hanging oppressively across the overgrown landscape. Unlike a typical phone recording, the image is stretched into a panoramic aspect ratio (usually reserved for Hollywood epics), while colours are intensified into irradiated hues.
It's an astonishing advertisement for what consumer electronics are capable of nowadays, though the film resists some of the more idiosyncratic limitations of pocket cameras. There's a noticeable shift away from its scrappy, low-budget origins, with the occasional use of drones and expensive cinema cameras adding an additional sheen to its exterior.
The particulars of Spike's narrative are better left to be discovered, especially as the film saves its most tantalising ideas for its final stretch; an imminent follow-up, directed by Candyman's Nia Da Costa, is set for release in just seven months, leaving this legacy sequel feeling a little incomplete.
The human story of 28 Years Later is surprisingly compelling in its own right and, unlike the broader expansion of this world, is kept satisfyingly contained. Fiennes utterly commands the third act of the film with a unique take on Dr Kelson's enigmatic, Kurtz-like figure, whose towering monuments to death comprise the film's most striking imagery.
If rage fuelled the early days of the virus outbreak, grief is now the guiding light through its long-term ravages. Amid the exorbitant displays of brutality, death is treated with an unexpected tenderness that raises 28 Years Later to new emotional heights within the genre.
After a character has their spinal cord ripped from their body, we observe in great detail as their head is thrust into a kiln, scrubbed free of its charred scalp, and washed. You'll have to trust me when I say it's one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen.
28 Years Later is in cinemas now.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


SBS Australia
2 hours ago
- SBS Australia
First Nations festival gives a taste of an ancient culture
On a warm night in the town of Jabiru in the Northern Territory - locals and Traditional Owners are uncovering a ground oven, with food for hundreds of people. The cook-up is part of an annual food event named Taste of Kakadu, connecting visitors with people who live in Jabiru. It is an event though which First Nations' culture is shared and celebrated. Although buffalo is an animal that was introduced during colonisation - first on the Tiwi Islands around 1825 - today, this shared meal is opening conversations among people who have never been introduced to the delicacy. "It's my first time tasting buffalo and I really like it. This is my first time really connecting with Aboriginal culture, and I really love it" For 22-year-old Siah Miargu, it's also a time to grow her skills as a junior ranger and guide. Guests are sharing a meal of barramundi, bush potatoes and a sweet treat, with Siah showing how to eat "wunt wunt". "This is wunt wunt… we just open up, we normally just clean this out, or eat it like this. I tell them the story how our ancestors walked around this area to look for bush tuckers." Yellow Water and the surrounding floodplain is the heart of Kakadu and is an important food source for those living on Country, including up to a million Magpie geese, a bird that is special to Traditional Owners. Paul Iskov is a chef from Western Australia who is cooking at the Taste of Kakadu. His role involves not just preparing traditional cuisine, but understanding the origin of each ingredient. "It's really nice to hear those stories about ingredients that connect country up here. The water lily's are down where you catch the barramundi and this cheeky yam is pretty much on the side of the bank as well, so all those ingredients tie together." Paul is known among chefs as Yoda and has travelled to Kakadu many times to develop culinary dishes - and the Kakadu plum is one that has captured global attention. Queensland researchers in September last year, found the fruit has antioxidant properties. Scientific research, now reinforcing traditional knowledge that has been known for thousands of years. And it is knowledge like this that has enriched the experience of visitors, experiencing the First Nations event. "There definitely needs to be more stuff like this, if this was more frequent, you'd definitely get more people looking into it." Creating opportunities to listen and learn.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
‘Give him a car': Aussie Rules erupts over sensational ‘mark of the century'
Alex Jesaulenko, eat your heart out. We have a new contender for the mark of the 21st century after a player in Victoria's Eastern Football League took an all-time specky on Saturday. Playing for Blackburn Moreton Park against Balwyn, Daniel Wood took the sensational mark after the footy was kicked high into the air. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Wood launched himself onto the shoulders of an opponent and got some unbelievable hang time, floating in the air before taking the mark and crashing to the turf. A massive gasp went up in the crowd and his teammates were visibly in shock as he went flying to take the mark. Wood landed heavily but thankfully appeared to be OK as teammates flocked to check on him and congratulate him on the mark, which has already been described as a candidate for mark of the century. One opposition player can be seen halfheartedly calling for a score review in the background, before Wood made the moment even better by going back and kicking the goal. Wood's mark evoked memories of Alex Jesaulenko's iconic for Carlton in the 1970 Grand Final, and Shaun Smith's all-time hanger in the goalsquare for Melbourne in 1995. The Box Hill Hawks account X shared footage of the mark on social media, writing: 'Yesterday, while playing for Blackburn, our own Daniel Wood took one of the greatest marks in the history of Australian rules football. 'Don't believe me? Just watch … Give him a car, a boat, a plane, the International Space Station - this is as good as it gets.' Former AFL player Daniel Gorringe was just as stunned, writing on his @dandoesfooty page: 'We should give him a car.' One fan wrote on Instagram: 'If that was me I would just retire. Can't do any better than that.' A second said: 'His boss is hoping he lands in time for work on Monday.' A third joked: 'Score review what we can see is that the player has gone into space after that mark. Decision on the scoreboard.' Another said: 'That's the greatest mark of all time.' Wood's sensational mark comes a month after a VFL player left jaws on the floor with one of the longest goals ever kicked. In the opening quarter of the VFL clash between Coburg and Sydney, it was Swans player Jordan Endemann who delivered the absurd scenes. Off the back of a turnover, Endemann received the ball on the back flank before launching a torpedo towards his own half. The kick was unloaded from just inside the back end of the centre square and quickly sailed out of view of the camera as it soared through the air. As the camera panned toward Sydney's forward 50, Swans forward Jack Buller turned and began sprinting back towards goal. The ball came back into view, landing around 25-30m from the goals. But the journey wasn't over there as it rolled end on end, beating out Buller and Coburg defender Rhys Galvin as it bounced through for a goal.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
Winx's first colt to be sold at Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale in 2026
Could this be the most valuable thoroughbred yearling offered for sale anywhere in the world next year? This little colt with the white blaze just happens to be the second foal born from the all-time great racemare, Winx. His father was Snitzel, the four-time Champion Australian Sire, who sadly passed away earlier this month which only makes this colt even more valuable when he enters the sale ring at the Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale next year. Winx's first foal was sold at the Inglis Easter Sale last year for $10 million – a world record for a yearling filly. It is estimated Winx's colt by Snitzel will at least challenge the Australian record sale price for a yearling colt of $5 million. Debbie Kepitis, a part-owner of Winx, became so emotionally attached to the mare's first foal she bid $10 million to buy her back. But Mrs Kepitis said she is trying to be more pragmatic about Winx's colt. 'You can only do one of those horses (Winx's filly) in your lifetime,'' Mrs Kepitiis said. 'It was hard to part with the filly but I have to be realistic with the second foal. 'He's gorgeous, he's cheeky, and he has thrown a lot to Snitzel which is exciting given he was such a good producer.'' Mrs Kepitis said Winx's ownership group which includes Peter and Patty Tighe, and Elizabeth and Rick Treweeke agreed to offer the Snitzel colt for sale. 'It's not easy to part with these amazing animals but we can't keep everything,'' she said. 'We appreciate this colt and hopefully he can go on and shine for our beautiful mare.'' Peter Tighe, who has travelled to the United States where the acclaimed movie-documentary, 'A Horse Called Winx' will feature at the Prescott Film Festival in Arizona next month, said he has not ruled out buying back into the mare's colt when he is offered for sale at Easter. 'I would be interested to buy into the colt, depending on the circumstances,'' Tighe said. 'We get regular updates about the colt's progress and he's a nice type, he seems to be doing really well.'' Tighe would not be drawn on how much the colt could fetch at the Easter Yearling Sale but conceded the thrill of watching Winx's first foal (by Pierro) being sold at the Riverside complete last year was 'indescribable'. 'It absolutely blew our minds, the team at Inglis did an incredible job and we think the Snitzel colt will get the attention of investors from right around the world in 2026,'' Mr Tighe said. Inglis Bloodstock chief executive Sebastian Hutch said it was humbling to be given the chance to offer Winx's latest foal for sale at Riverside Stables in Sydney next autumn. 'To have the first male offspring of the mighty Winx coming to the Inglis Easter Yearling Sale is an absolute thrill and something we're hugely grateful to the ownership group for,'' Hutch said. 'I have been lucky enough to see this colt a number of times through his development. He has always looked like a good horse and I think he is going to present as a very good yearling at the sale. 'He's a handsome colt with great movement and an unflappable temperament. He's a special sort of horse. His presence at next year's Inglis Easter Yearling Sale is going to make for a captivating spectacle.''