28 Weeks Later (2007)
One of the best sci-fi/horror films of the decade.
28 Weeks Later (sequel to 28 Days Later) is one of the boldest and scariest sci-fi movies of the 2000s. Here is one of those rare films that is so committed to its horror that you truly do not know if the main characters will make it to the end (indeed some of them do not). It also contains genuine moral dilemmas, not simple social critiques that we can all lean back and easily agree with. With a persistence that allows no opportunity to relax, this movie will leave you exhausted, both physically and morally.
28 Weeks Later takes place twenty-eight weeks after the original spreading of the virus (as opposed to twenty-eight weeks after the previous film). All of Great Britain has been wiped out, except for a few survivors here and there, and the American government has moved in to eradicate any remnants of the plague and begin rebuilding the country. Though the virus has been officially declared wiped out, the American military occupation remains. Now the country's surviving citizens are returning to take up residence in apartment buildings in a small, secured part of the country until the rest of it can be explored and declared safe. When the virus resurfaces in the middle of this closely confined country, ultimate chaos ensues.
There is some obvious commentary here on America's occupation in Iraq. If victory has been declared, why is the military still there? In this case, it's either because they're really not a hundred percent sure of their victory, though they do seem pretty confident, or, more likely (at least in the movie's case), because they just like being in control. When the outbreak does occur and the military's numbers are no match for controlling it, their only option is to kill everyone. The thing is, though, that the killing of innocents really legitimately is their only option in the situation that has arisen. Otherwise, the entire continent is at risk of falling to the Rage virus. Their mistake was in believing so confidently that they could control the whole situation in the first place. It is the most overarching of the film's many horrors.
The most impressive thing about 28 Weeks Later is how scary it is, and in multiple ways. The infected are as vicious as ever, and their violence would have been enough, but this film takes it to the extreme. Their viciousness provides for jump scares galore, but they are warranted given the nature of the problem, and they are not overused. These scares also give the quieter moments unbelievable tension. At one point in the film, we follow a young child alone in a dark place in which there might be, and probably are, some of the infected. The only sound is his shaky breathing. When I saw this in the theater, I was so on-edge that I realized I was breathing the exact same way. This all paves the way for subtle scares, too, such as the moments when an infected is simply standing or walking by in the background. When one of these disappears, you know it could be anywhere, but all you can do is push forth and pray for luck.
Another aspect of the movie that paves the way for its horror is the fact that it is so well written. I have seen few films so true to the story that it progresses with total disregard for its characters. This is a good thing. No one is kept alive just because the plot needs them or because the story has invested too much in them. It's as if the writers aren't even sure themselves if the film is going to make it to a satisfactory end. Of course, this is how a horror film should be. It creates a world where anything truly can happen to anyone at anytime, and survival is not at all guaranteed.
The one main aspect of this film that could be seen as a flaw is the set of circumstances under which the outbreak reoccurs. The way the virus itself comes back is almost cheating, and the way in which it is able to begin its initial re-spreading is a great coincidence. All the characters involved just so happen to be connected to the only other characters who could open the door for the virus to enter the population. These coincidences, however, are permissible because the film is more of a "What if?" than a prophecy; it's asking what this type of situation could be like rather than claiming that something specific is going to eventually happen to us.
If I have downplayed the sci-fi aspects of this film, it is because horror is its primary strategy. It is horror in the mode of science fiction. Its sci-fi characteristics give us the premise, and it with that premise, it runs with the rage of a bloodthirsty, berserk, mindless human body. Along with that comes a necessary veering into horror, a veering which happened in the first film and continues here. But, the sci-fi elements are essential; they give us a basis from which to view the political commentary, and the virus specifically can be symbolic of an enemy, something we try to eradicate but that will always return. As an engine for thought, this is an interesting science fiction film. As an experience, it is an awesome horror movie, a movie with a lot of guts . . . so to speak.




