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View Full Version : More zombie action: 28 Weeks Later


Angrist
03-31-2007, 08:01 AM
http://media.movies.ign.com/media/820/820981/vids_1.html

Sequal to 28 Days Later. Thoughts? What made part 1 so special, was the 'dead' London and the feeling of being alone. I don't expect that here.

MrCoffee
03-31-2007, 11:25 AM
haha veerr cool

Teuthida
03-31-2007, 12:07 PM
I'm with you Angrist. The grit is gone.

Typhoid
03-31-2007, 01:01 PM
I want to see 28 years later, when they're all old, and still running from the zombies. Or 28 centuries later, where the zombies have learned to form unions and peaceful protests against human rights.

What about 28 seconds later?
The movie takes place 28 seconds after the ending of the other one.

KillerGremlin
03-31-2007, 03:41 PM
i think the premise of 28 weeks later looks far more interesting than 28 days later

romero has been hit or miss since dawn of the dead, but land of the dead was kind of cool and the remake of dawn of the dead was just awesome. i thought 28 days later was just okay, a decent zombie movie that could have been just a tad bit better. however, this looks far more interesting - they think they have everything under control, tons of living people get together in a city - and bam. hopefully it will be a decent film.

Dylflon
03-31-2007, 04:44 PM
I liked 28 Days Later...

Swan
03-31-2007, 09:17 PM
I never liked 28 Days Later. There was something about it that....bothered me.


We shall see...

Fox 6
04-01-2007, 04:15 PM
I just didnt like the start with the chimp watching all the violent things, seemed corny.

Neo
04-01-2007, 10:01 PM
The first half of 28 days was good, but the second half was a completely different movie which sucked balls.

DeathsHand
04-02-2007, 02:08 AM
The first half of 28 days was good, but the second half was a completely different movie which sucked balls.

Did you expect Jim to wander the empty streets screaming "Hello!?" and running from the infected the entire time?
I personally enjoyed the movie throughout... I didn't even have a problem with the ending, not all zombie infestations have to temporarily (given the genre's history of multiple sequels) end with a nuclear blast, powerful electric discharges, multiple shots to multiple brains as carried out by the army or a militia, or the deaths of all the main characters (either by zombie or militia)...

28 weeks later... *strokes chin*... It's being released by Fox Atomic. So far they've published Turistas and The Hills Have Eyes 2...
Yeah... They appear to be Fox's version of Sony's Screen Gems... I'm not getting my hopes up...

KillerGremlin
04-02-2007, 03:20 AM
i enjoyed resident evil more than 28 days later and resident evil sucked...just in a good way that was better than 28 days later

i'm too lazy to put my finger on it, but i'm with neo on the second half being the part i enjoyed the least

Dylflon
04-02-2007, 04:02 AM
The thing most people overlook about 28 Days Later is that even though it has zombies in it, the zombies aren't the main focus.

The film was more about surviving in a civilization that has collapsed and gone mad. And also, they have to run from zombies.

The first time I watched it, I was really put off by the final act with the military outpost. But upon watching it again recently, I've decided I like it. It shows how far their society has really collapsed. The main characters get to somewhere they are supposed to feel safe, but these soldiers try to hungrily devour (sexually this time) the women folk and have objectors killed.

Not safe from zombies, not safe from people in a zombie filled world.

I thought it was a nice departure from how most zombie movies go which DH already summed up.

Angrist
04-02-2007, 07:30 AM
My brother heard there's a special edition/ending which doesn't even include the soldiers, is that true?

Professor S
04-02-2007, 09:29 AM
The best zombie films aren't about zombies, and thats been true since Romero invented the genre with Night of the Living Dead (or was it "The Last man on Earth"? that invented it?). Danny Boyle didn't revolutionize the zombie film, he just made a very good one. They have always been about how flawed people will survive this manageable disaster. I actually thought 28 Days Later was more about the zombies, just because their running zombies were more of a threat than the traditional dimwitted, plodding ones.

28 Days Later had to grow on me. I am a zombie flick fanatic, and find the whole genre to be enthralling if done correctly (read: not House of the Dead). Initially I hated the idea of running zombies, as it ruined the whole feeling of slow, crushing inevitability... and not at the hands of zombies, but because humans cannot deal with the situation without turning on one another. What always terrified me about Romero's films was the idea that this was a creeping, unavoidable destruction of society. 28 Days Later held the same themes as most of Romero's films, but it seemed to add the running zombies simply to add cheap scares. But over time, I've grown to enjoy the movie for its own qualities and I have to say I really like it.

As for the alternate ending, there are 3, and the best is the one that is only shown in storyboard. If that ending had been used, 28 Days Later would have not been just a good movie, but instead would have entered legendary status, IMO.

FYI, if you love zombie films, check out The Walking Dead comic series by Robert Kirkman. It is the best zombie story I've ever read or seen... EVER. Its absolutely fantastic, and I can;t recommend it enough. Its avalable in graphic novel form, so its easy to catch up with the story. Also, watch the afforementioned "The Last Man on Earth" starring Vincent Price. True, it centers on a form of viral vampirism rather than zombies, but all the same themes are present and it captures the desolate feeling of 28 Days Later, or should I say, 28 Days Later captures the desolate feeling of The Last Man on Earth. IMO, it is the first modern (not voodoo based) zombie film ever made.

DeathsHand
04-02-2007, 04:21 PM
My brother heard there's a special edition/ending which doesn't even include the soldiers, is that true?

As The Professor has pointed out, there are 3...
The one your brother is talking about is the one that is shown only through storyboards...

Instead of being "rescued" by the soldiers at the roadblock, the surviving characters take their infected companion to the research lab that the infected chimps originally escaped from, and find a cure for the disease - complete blood transfusion...
Jim sacrifices himself so that they can carry out the procedure in the hopes that *infected character* (if you've seen the movie you know which one it is) can be cured...

As the director himself pointed out, that ending is rather far-fetched considering they had previously established that a single drop of infected blood or saliva entering your body (mouth, eyes, wound) was enough to infect you...
And I personally think it sounds a tad hokey...

I like the official ending the way it is... This wasn't like in the "Dead" series where the dead were coming back to life all over the world for no apparent reason, no matter how that person died, and to completely rid the world of the problem, humans would have to:
- Find a way to prevent natural death
- Avoid death by zombie or other violent/accidental means
- Kill every single zombie one by one
The quick-acting nature of the virus in 28 Days Later would make it nearly impossible to spread past the British Isles... And since the zombies are not really zombies, they didn't receive the added benefit of everlasting (until someone kills them in a very specific way) life...
They didn't need a cure... And the cure in the scrapped ending wasn't even a cure so much as it was the ability to decide who was going to die...

28 Days Later, as a whole, seems more... "Real" than most other zombie movies (and not just because it doesn't actually deal with the crazy idea of the dead rising from the grave)...I felt that the ending fit. *shrug*