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"28 Weeks Later" picks up six months after the rage virus has annihilated the mainland Britain. The US army declares that the war against the infection has been won, and that the reconstruction of the country can begin. As the first wave of refugees return, a family is reunited - but one of them unwittingly carries a terrible secret. The virus is not yet dead, and this time, it is more dangerous than ever. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (8)

POMO 

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English 28 Weeks Later is aggressive, harsh and self-consuming in its inhumanity. It’s far more of an action movie than a horror one. Fresnadillo uses so much shooting, smoke, flames and explosions that the resulting film looks more like a video game adaptation focusing on the visual-atmospheric aspect (Silent Hill and Resident Evil put together) than Danny Boyle’s existential 28 Days Later. The quality cast is also wasted in the director’s hands – the characters do not have the necessary depth and serve only as guides through dramatic encounters with zombies or soldiers destroying everything alive. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English It’s well made, the attack on the house at the beginning fills you with optimism, but then it gets bogged into a screenwriting quagmire. Have you noticed that whenever the American Army shows up in a horror film, nothing good happens? It’s no different here. The only cool thing is the helicopter mowing zombies. Technically speaking, there’s very little to reproach, and the music score is also worth praise, but even though it’s fairly good fun, it lags a bit behind its predecessor. The ending hints clearly at 28 Months Later… Yeah, why not? ()

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Othello 

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English Fresnadillo is not a bad director at all. It's just that the script sucks so badly and the director has obviously had to wipe his brow a lot trying to make a good movie out of this crap. In the end, it was pretty successful. Sure, many times the film contradicts its predecessor (the infected no longer mind the light, it's mentioned that the disease isn't interspecies though it spread from the apes) and Boyle's first film is occasionally unpleasantly visually robbed. However, it won me over right from the start with an absolutely awesome escape scene across a field and throughout the film it delighted with brutality, action, horror, and invention. For example, a steadycam attached to the body of an infected man is not a bad idea. It's just cool, but definitely not as psychotic as the first one. ()

Isherwood 

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English For anyone who has ever wondered what a "pandemic after-party" would be like, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo provides us with a very (un)satisfying answer. This Spanish talent may not be able to perform miracles, but he is great at pumping up the film with dynamics, throwing out anything that even smacks of compromise, and spicing everything up with a good portion of a hopeless atmosphere. Accompanied by Murphy’s perfect music and with an ensemble of excellent actors (Jeremy Renner was born to wear the uniform on screen), it offers a high portion of adrenaline fun, culminating in several highlights. There are many criticisms that can be made about it, but the film is like a skilled chameleon, which you will admire all the more if you don't go see them in their pavilion three times a week. ()

lamps 

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English A relentless action flick with a simple plot scheme based on a teenage killing video game. It entertains but doesn't fulfil the horror essence of the zombie genre despite having the ultimate bloodthirsty creatures. A more or less haphazard sequence of spectacular scenes with no tangible atmosphere; this is exactly the reason Romero has remained the rightful master of this genre after the turn of the millennium... 60% ()

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