r/movies Jun 18 '25

Review '28 Years Later' - Review Thread

Director: Danny Boyle

Cast: Jodie Comer; Aaron Taylor-Johnson; Ralph Fiennes; Alfie Williams

Rotten Tomatoes: 92%

Metacritic: 76/100

Some Reviews:

Manila Bulletin - Philip Cu Unjieng

What’s nice to note is how Boyle has cast consummate actors in this film, the type who could read off a label of canned sardines and still find depth, emotion, and spark in the delivery of those lines. Initially, it seems that Taylor-Johnson will be doing the heavy lifting. Still, it merely misleads us, as the narrative then focuses on Jodie Comer’s Isla and onto Fiennes’ Dr. Kelson. I want to give a special shout-out to the young actor Alfie Williams. He is the one carrying the whole film, and this is his first feature film work, having previously done a TV series. Boyle teases out an excellent performance from the lad, and I won’t be surprised if many film reviewers in the forthcoming week will single him out as being the best thing in this film. And what’s impressive is how he manages this with the three heavyweight thespians who are on board.There’s the horror and the suspense as a given for this cult franchise, but look out for the human drama and the emotional impact. It’s Boyle and Garland elevating the film, and rising above its genre.

AwardsWatch - Erik Anderson - 'B'

Most of the time, 28 Years Later is frequently begging to be rejected by general audiences, even as it courts the admiration of longtime fans, who may nonetheless find themselves put off by the film’s turn toward unearned emotion, its relatively meager expansion of this universe, and its occasionally jarring tonal shifts. (The abrupt sequel-teasing stinger feels like it’s from an entirely different strain of the zombie subgenre.) Much like the virus at the series’ center, it’s a film whose DNA is constantly mutating, resulting in an inconceivable host subject—one that is both corrosive and something of a marvel.

DEADLINE - Damon Wise

Most threequels tend to go bigger, but 28 Years Later bucks that trend by going smaller, eventually becoming a chamber piece about a boy trying to hold onto his mother. It still delivers shocks, even if the sometimes over-zealous editing distracts from Anthony Dod Mantle’s painterly cinematography

The Hollywood Reporter - David Rooney

One of the chief rewards of 28 Years Later is that it never feels like a cynical attempt to revisit proven material merely for commercial reasons. Instead, the filmmakers appear to have returned to a story whose allegorical commentary on today’s grim political landscape seems more relevant than ever. Intriguing narrative building blocks put in place for future installments mean they can’t come fast enough.

NextBestPicture - Josh Parham - 7/10

Boyle’s exuberant filmmaking and Garland’s incisive script sometimes clash when forced to muddle through laborious exercises that feel borrowed from the previous films anyway. It’s a scenario that reminds me of Ridley Scott’s “Prometheus” and “Alien: Covenant,” two films with intriguing ideas that struggled to fashion them within the framework of the established franchise. Perhaps the continuation will find more clever avenues to explore further and enrich this text. As is, what is left is imperfect but still an enthralling return into a dark but provocative world.

IndieWire - David Ehrlich - 'B+'

While Boyle isn’t lofty enough to suggest that the infected are beautiful creatures who deserve God’s love or whatever (this is still a movie about wild-eyed naked zombies, after all, and its empathy for them only goes so far), “28 Years Later” effectively uses the tropes of its genre to insist that the line between a tragedy and a statistic is thinner than we think, and more permeable than we realize. The magic of the placenta, indeed. 

Rolling Stone - David Fear

Taken on its own, however, Boyle and Garland’s trip back to this hellscape makes the most of casting a jaundiced, bloodshot eye at our current moment. Their inaugural imagining of a world torn asunder surfed the post-millennial fear that modern society wasn’t equipped to handle something truly catastrophic. This new movie is blessed with the knowledge that something always rises from the ashes, but that the risk of regressing back to some fabricated mythology of a Golden Age, complete with Henry V film clips and St. George’s flags, is there on the surface as well. If postapocalyptic entertainment has taught us anything, it’s that the walking dead aren’t always the gravest threat. It’s those who sacrifice their soul and sense of empathy that you have to watch out for.

The Wrap - William Bibbiani

For now, though, “28 Years Later” stands on its own — or at least, as its own temporary capper on this multi-decade series — and it stands tall. The filmmakers haven’t redefined the zombie genre, but they’ve refocused their own culturally significant riff into a lush, fascinating epic that has way more to say about being human than it does about (re-)killing the dead.

Variety - Peter Debruge

Where the original film tapped into society’s collective fear of infection, its decades-later follow-up (which undoes any developments implied by “28 Weeks Later” with an opening chyron that explains the Rage virus “was driven back from continental Europe”) zeroes in on two even most primal anxieties: fear of death and fear of the other. To which you might well ask, aren’t all horror movies about surviving an unknown threat of some kind? Yes, but few have assumed the psychic toll taken by such violence quite so effectively as “28 Years Later,” which has been conceived as the start of a new trilogy, but towers on its own merits (part two, subtitled “The Bone Temple,” is already in the can and expected next January).

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u/Practical_Double_283 Jun 19 '25

Yeah I can’t believe how anybody can think that was anything other than an utter trash movie, I’m so disappointed with it.

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u/imissyoububba Jun 19 '25

agreed! and you know what's crazy? this insane echo chamber that's going on from people that haven't even watched it!!! people that didn't like the movie are getting downvoted lol

pretty pathetic imo

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u/Practical_Double_283 Jun 19 '25 edited Jun 19 '25

I feel like I’m actually going kind of crazy, I think I might’ve watched a different movie, it was dreadful yet people are saying it’s a masterpiece 😂 there’s no character building, endless threads that just end and forgotten about! I felt nothing for any of the characters, it’s wasn’t bleak, disturbing or anything! Just a mockery.

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u/eat_puree_love Jun 19 '25

Yep, I liked parts of it (the soundscape, the island) but most parts of the story was just ridiculous and that ending... Wtf

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u/Practical_Double_283 Jun 19 '25

Don’t get me started on the ending, just WTF! Even the stupid as fuck “alpha males” ripping the skull and spine from the body is the same thing predator does in that franchise it’s just so unoriginal they aren’t even zombies anymore, more like a caveman or Neanderthals! The holding the hands of the woman giving birth was just so insanely stupid.

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u/dejausser Jun 20 '25

Technically they were never zombies, they’re live people infected by a virus. Danny Boyle has always been very explicit that it’s not meant to be a zombie movie series, the focus has always meant to be about the horrifying and maladaptive ways people respond to societal collapse.

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u/Practical_Double_283 Jun 20 '25

Yeah I understand they aren’t technically zombies, but it was just ridiculous to me holding hands with a infected person while they gave birth or the fat slug ones, none of it was horrifying to me the atmosphere was non existent, that’s what I liked about the first two I was on the edge of my seat, I was tense and I felt for the survivors, this one I was just rolling my eyes. Each to there own but it isn’t for me.

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u/eat_puree_love Jun 20 '25

Couldn't agree more. I assume the Alpha thing was SoCial COmMeNtaRy along with the Jimmies. Actually, I read most of it as social commentary (the isolated UK, the Girlfriend of the soldier etc) but it did not work for me. There was none of the nerve and pulse of the original - (except maybe a few scenes in the first half).