28 Years Later (2025) : It’s the end of the world again... and it’s never looked this alive.

 


Danny Boyle, you beautiful chaotic genius. Twenty-eight years after 28 Days Later redefined the zombie genre (sorry, infected), he’s back with a legacy sequel that somehow delivers jump scares, existential grief, political commentary, and Jodie Comer Irish dancing, all without breaking a sweat. I genuinely enjoyed every minute of this film, and my blood pressure may never fully recover.

From the first frame, 28 Years Later announces itself as something different. The world is broken but not quite collapsed, and the rage virus is no longer the central mystery, it’s the backdrop to a story about memory, growing up too soon, and trying to keep your soul intact when everything else has rotted. Boyle weaves in documentary footage, night vision chaos, Brexit, and even Olivier’s Henry V to build a version of Britain that feels just as haunted by history as it is by its monsters.

Aaron Taylor-Johnson brings an earthy rage, Ralph Fiennes is predictably magnetic, and Allie Williams is a revelation. But it’s Jodie Comer who carries the film’s soul in her pocket, delivering a performance that’s funny, furious, and deeply human.

Yes, some characters make absurdly rash decisions, but hey, people in horror movies always do. What 28 Years Later offers in return is a staggering sound design, and some of the most inventive and manic direction since Boyle's early work. The film is both raw and elegant, like a punk band covering a classical symphony. The real miracle is how Boyle and Garland turn that chaos into something profound.

Somewhere around the midpoint, it shifts into a whole different beast, one that asks you to contemplate death, not just dodge it. It's weird, risky, and oddly comforting. By the time the bonkers finale rolled around, I was equal parts heartbroken and exhilarated. Visceral, strange, and unexpectedly beautiful, 28 Years Later is a worthy follow-up to a modern classic and one of the most creative horror films in years.

Long live punk cinema. Long live rage.
Bring on The Bone Temple.

Comments

Achyuth said…
Easily one of the top films of the year, this one.
B.W. said…
Honestly don't get why people didn't like it. One of the better written films of the year, and that ending actually made sense from a universe-building PoV.
DB Cooper said…
Cool comparison to the earlier films—shows how much you really know your zombie cinema.
Bixtix said…
Dude, your hype is contagious! I was excited for 28 Years Later already, now I’m even more pumped.
Gyandeep said…
One of my favourite films of the year. Great write up.
Anonymous said…
Loved how you compared it to the original. Really showed how far the series has come.
TimberBoy said…
This review felt like chatting with a fellow fan after the movie. So fun. Keep at it Rahul.
Antoine said…
Totally agree, this sequel carries the weight of the first while doing its own thing.
BritHamlet said…
Great callout on the atmosphere. That’s what gave me chills the most.
BeyondTheVilla said…
You captured the anticipation perfectly! I can't wait for the next one.