23 years after revolutionizing the horror genre by modifying Undead for regular, fast -moving people infected with anger virus in "28 days later", Dani Boyle and Alex Garland returned to the Universe of Zombie they created with "28 years later" - 28 years later - Steven King's film liked it, but didn't scare it.
The two directors have changed a lot in both decades of their (not a) zombie film, making it "28 years later" a fascinating exercise so as not to try to do the same again. The AS /Film of the film Chris Evangelist described in his review, the film is "a kind of sensory overload-mix of violence, mixed media and often an awkward soundtrack turns along with a fever." Indeed, according to his review, "28 years later" manages to be frightening and moving, Impressive, efficient and unforgettable sequel to horror.
In "28 years later", we meet Spike (Alfie Williams) and his father Jameimi (Aaron Taylor-Nsonson) nearly 30 years after the rage virus escaped from a bioaapani lab and ravaged the UK mainland, which quenched the rest of the world. The father-son lives on a small island, connected to the mainland through a narrow highway that disappears with a large tide. Of course, one of them decided to embark on the mainland and quickly discover a world that descended into madness and virus that was mutated over their imagination.
In the years before being "28 years later", there were many ideas about what the third film in the series could appear. One of them, admits Alex Garland, could have been a disaster - quite another movie in a completely language.
What if the zombies, but it is a collision of soldiers?
After "28 weeks later" was released in 2007, without Boyle or Garland joining the script, fans began to hope that the duo would reconsider this universe with more stories. At some point, Garland began to come with potential ideas for new films uploaded to the "28 Days" universe, as it even passed after writing the duties of someone else. Only after Kovid-19, Garland began to think about writing a third film script.
Talking to Rolling stoneGarland recounts one of the early ideas for another movie. The concept was to follow a group of military commandos that would break the quarantine and reach the laboratory where the rage virus was originally created - in order to find a cure. Except, as soon as they reached the laboratory, the commandos will find another group that has already been there first and trying to arm the virus. It was intended to be a film with "shootout and mass attacks and large, pieces of action -style pieces". The first group, those trying to cure the virus, were to be Chinese special forces, and the film was to be completely in Mandarin and Titles.
"It was completely and ultimately generally," Garland said, laughing, saying Danny Boyle had effectively ridiculed his idea before helping to try different ways to make the story. "Finally, we both gave up that. But, weird enough, writing something so generic was the element of liberating all our problems. It gave us permission to have a totally empty slate."
28 years later is better than we could have imagined
The thought of making a zombie film set in the UK, where the heroes are Chinese soldiers trying to make a cure for a zombie -like virus, sounds, on paper, as an interesting idea. For one, it feels like a big slap in the face of the anti-Asian hatred that appeared in the early days of Kovid-19, plus the idea of a movie written by Alex Garland and potentially with a great director who was in Mandarin is a cold thinking experiment.
However, it is easy to see the sequel to the horror film is a great action movie with many soldiers would be quite boring and derivative, given that this was exactly what the "aliens" made 40 years ago. Instead, the film we got is probably the best script for a sequel published over 20 years after the original. "28 years later" is a fantastic expansion of ideas and the world of "28 days later", introducing wild concepts of the zombie genre that at times even Resembles a secret adaptation of a classic horror story. The infected here, after so many years, developed further, and they seem to have even begun to establish communities that is shocking and is also one of the best zombie movie ideas for years.
But even only the main story, though simple (and at least one way resembles the plot of "28 weeks later"), also hides a pretty emotional story of accepting death in the face of absolute hell. It is a movie about how we face our inevitable death and how that knowledge turns some people into violent madness, others in peaceful acceptance. There is no zombie movie like "28 years later", and this is because Garland has set aside its time and decided not to go with its first instinct.
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