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Dom Robinson reviews

28 Days Later

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Animal rights activists break into a lab where monkeys are being tested on, attack the scientist (I'm Alan Partridge's Tony Hayers, David Schneider) and release the caged creatures. However, they've been deliberately infected with 'Rage' and letting them out of their enforced home is not a good idea...

28 Days Later, Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up in his hospital bed and is surprised to find there's no-one in the building. In fact, as he dresses up in standard issue blue hospital pyjamas and steps outside he realises there's no-one in the whole of London either.

Alas, what starts with promise soon goes downhill and just seems effectively pointless. Jim chances across a couple of freedom fighters, Selena (Naomie Harris) and Mark (Noah Huntley), who inform him the country is ravaged by the Infected - zombies whose only mission is to infected those who are still okay. They come across more Infected to dispatch, meet up with Frank (Brendan Gleeson) and his daughter Hannah (Megan Burns) and set off to find more uninfected people.

As (bad) luck would have it, the only ones they find are mad Major Henry West (Christopher Eccleston) and his men. Their only hope is finding a way out of the country, since, while England may be lacking in life and electricity, other countries are living normal lives.

I only carried on until the end to see how things would turn out but it was only mildly gory and sadly predictable and I couldn't recommend it to anyone. Go and watch a much better movie such as the original Dawn of the Dead.


Shot on DV digital cameras this may be a dull movie but it's one that's well-filmed and brings across the dead landscape very effectively. Presented in anamorphic 1.85:1 widescreen, there's no problems with the image and it looks good when the image is treated such that frames are missing to convey a sense of panic during fast motion.

Presented in Dolby Digital 5.1, there are also sound moments that'll make you jump out of your skin such as 26 minutes into the film - the surprise of which I'll leave for you to find out - but I had the volume way up high as the scene content was quiet and I had a fan running in the same room during the hot summer. The volume then deafened and I reached for the control so as not to disturb the neighbours any more than I had!

The extras are very thin on the ground:

The disc is also inflicted with a few bloody-annoying trailers that you're forced to sit through the second the disc boots up as if it was a rental title. However, at least with this disc you can fast-forward through them.

The film contains 32 chapters, subtitles are available in English and Swedish and the main menu is animated and scored with a looped piece of music from the film.

FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS



OVERALL

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2003.

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