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It's a little jarring to see makeshift memorials with flyers for missing
persons on the big screen, but the fact that their presence is due to a
killer virus responsible for wiping out scores of people is even more
potentially troubling in this post-9/11 world of ours. And that's part of
what makes 28 Days Later so much fun. Following outbreaks of anthrax, SARS
and monkeypox, Later (actually shot before the terrorist attacks) could
never seem more believable than it does now.
After a brief prologue that shows a bunch of do-gooders attempting to rescue
animals from the Cambridge Primate Research Center, a rage-related virus is
accidentally released into the public (God forbid someone find a cure for
cancer or a way to make a tastier monkeyburger, you pricks). 28 days later,
bike courier Jim (Cillian Murphy, How Harry Became a Tree) wakes up from a
coma in a completely abandoned London hospital. But it's not just the
hospital that's empty - it's the entire city, and it looks way cooler than
when Cameron Crowe did the same thing with Times Square in Vanilla Sky.
Eventually Jim does find some life among a pile of corpses in a church, but
they turn out to be blood-spewing zombies who want to feast on his delicious
flesh. Not being down with that scene, Jim hooks up with a small pack of
non-flesh eaters like himself, who explain what exactly happened while he
was in la-la land back at the hospital. The zombie virus, it seems, is
passed via blood and saliva and turns you from a mild-mannered human into a
bloodthirsty monster in about 10 seconds. But in a better way than Hulk.
Since part of the story - which I'm being purposefully vague about to reduce
spoilers - involves the group having to travel from Point A to a slightly
mysterious Point B, and since said journey involves going through a dark
freeway tunnel, it's easy to dismiss Days as a rip-off of Stephen King's The
Stand. But that's actually where the similarities end. Because of its
depiction of group insanity via isolation, Days is a bit more like Brian K.
Vaughn's excellent comic Y-The Last Man, or even The Beach, which was the
last film made by Days' director (Danny Boyle) and screenwriter (Alex
Garland).
I'm a big Boyle fan and still think The Beach got a bad rap (it was way too
overanalyzed because it was Leo's first post-Titanic feature). Days should
right people's impressions of the Trainspotting director, especially his
decision to shoot the film using digital video, which not only gives Days
more texture, it also gives it a more degraded, apocalyptic look and feel.
The fact that the DV camera was being wielded by Anthony Dod Mantle (the
veteran of three Dogme films, the upcoming Dogville and the two DV shorts
Boyle made for the BBC) only helps matters.
Also helping is Boyle's deft ability to choose the right songs to score his
film. In addition to using Brian Eno's "An Ending (Ascent)," which you may
remember from such films as Traffic, Boyle also selects God Speed! You Black
Emperor's "East Hastings," which practically gave me goosebumps. His zombies
aren't anything to look down your nose at, either. They're legitimately
frightening, especially the way they lurch and their impressive top speed.
These aren't your daddy's zombies, who ordinarily stagger around like old
people at the mall. And Days isn't a brainless slasher-zombie flick, like
(P)Resident Evil, even if its last act, which devolves into the video for
"Jeremy," is a bit unsatisfying.
1:52 - R for strong violence and gore, language and nudity
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X-RAMR-ID: 35151
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1168589
X-RT-TitleID: 1123236
X-RT-SourceID: 595
X-RT-AuthorID: 1146
X-RT-RatingText: 8/10
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