Washington Post by Ann Hornaday
Unrelentingly grim, unremittingly gross and unforgivably unattractive, 28 Days Later is an orgy of troubling images and bestial sound effects.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United Kingdom · 2002
Rated R · 1h 53m
Director Danny Boyle
Starring Cillian Murphy, Naomie Harris, Brendan Gleeson, Megan Burns
Genre Horror, Thriller, Science Fiction
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Twenty-eight days after a killer virus was accidentally unleashed from a British research facility, a small group of London survivors are caught in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. Carried by animals and humans, the virus turns those it infects into homicidal maniacs -- and it's absolutely impossible to contain.
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Washington Post by Ann Hornaday
Unrelentingly grim, unremittingly gross and unforgivably unattractive, 28 Days Later is an orgy of troubling images and bestial sound effects.
The look of the film, shot on digital video, is haunting and gritty. The cleaner, prettier look of 35mm would have detracted from the immediacy and sense of foreboding created in this artful blend of sci-fi and pseudo-realism.
Shows a rather arrogant disdain for its audience in between occasional flashes of flair.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
[Boyle] shrugs off any intellectual pretense to rollick in a dead-on scare fest. On that level, 28 Days Later is indeed a frightfully good time.
The movie is mercifully uncontaminated by the smarty-pants self-reflexiveness that has sucked the lifeblood from nearly all post-"Scream" horror pictures. Clever enough not to be too clever, Boyle and Garland play their story straight -- they just want to give you the creeps -- and, by so doing, bring the undead back to cinematic life.
Austin Chronicle by Kimberley Jones
Theres gore, all right, although the real terror lies in the tease, and the often dark, herky-jerky DV format ratchets up the tension to an almost unbearable degree.
Like his makeshift societies, Garland's tantalizing set-ups tend to unravel in unsatisfying ways.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland plumb the violence of the mind with slashing wit and shocking gravity. Happy nightmares.
Boyle's ingenuity with the camera gives this fraught journey plenty of menace and pizazz.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Rick Groen
Around about the third act, the picture does what no self-respecting virus ever would -- relents, turns confused, and lets our immune system fight back with thoughts of its own, with distracting cavils about the logic of the plot and the slightness of the themes.
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'28 Days Later' is among my top five favorite zombie films and one of my favorite horror films. Its premise is frightening enough: London has fallen to frenzying, running zombies. A lot of zombie movies think that, itself, is the greatest horror of the genre, to be overwhelmed by hordes of the undead suddenly and unmercifully. But Boyle shows us that the greatest dread is an inversion of the predator-prey dynamic in a far wider-scope than merely being eaten alive. Empty cityscapes, unsustainable supplies, and man-turned-against-man show the nearly unimaginable reality of man losing its position as the apex predator to another animal. It is lonely and frightening, but succumb to any sentimental version of these emotions and you will die. The London Bridge scene is one of the greatest in cinematic history, creating some of the most dramatic tension I've ever seen that culminates in absolutely nothing, an absolutely existential moment in an otherwise grounded story. Characters offer interesting reflections on the politics after the apocalypse although they, themselves, truly feel more like pawns in the political game Boyle has created than players of the game themselves. '28 Days Later' is an exciting foray into a shell of our world and paved the way for many of the interesting developments in the zombie apocalypse genre that followed it.