Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Find movies you'll love

thinkingwishfully Blog

  • 28 Weeks Later, it still works

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    28 Weeks Later  (2007)

    When I watched the trailer for 28 Weeks Later, I wasn't too impressed. Danny Boyle's original was a classic - a reinvention of the tired zombie genre, with great low-budget visuals and a no-name cast (this was before Cilian Murphy was known). The sequel trailer sported a bigger budget, explosions, and known actors such as Rose Byrne (Troy, Sunshine), Robert Carlyle (the Full Monty, the World is Not Enough) and even Michael from Lost. Oh, and a new director. To me it looked like a complete waste of a franchise. Why mess with a good recipe?

    But from the opening scene of the sequel I was hooked. I'm a sucker for great openings (among my favorites are Saving Private Ryan, Enduring Love and of course Raiders), and this one really hit the spot. The last movie that terrified me was Alien, back in 1997, so it takes a lot to chill my bones...but the tension on display here it so tangible it's hard not to wince. The zombies of this universe are faster, meaner, savager and more, um...blood-spitting...and the result is an enemy that's impossible to escape and hard to hide from.

    After the mid-blowing opening there is a good half hour of intriguing setup for the main plot, and then it's back into the action. Once it starts it never stops. The premise involves the US government cleaning up London after the first film's viral outbreak. Everybody has been evacuated and now the first residents are being reintroduced to the city. When the virus shows itself once more, the US soldiers don't know who to shoot down...and the result is a bloodbath and a slaughtering of innocents that brings the kind of tragedy we don't really get from typical George A. Romero zombie films. There are some great setpieces, including one in a tunnel seen only through the scope of a gun, which recalls the brilliant climax in Silence of the Lambs, and most notably a showdown between a crowd of zombies and some whirring helicopter blades. Awesome.

    So if you're in for a good scare with some intelligent social resonance, check out this great sequel, but watch it in the dark.

    http://www.spout.com/films/286769/default.aspx

  • Dude, this is sweet.

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    I hated this film at first. Seriously. I thought it was so dumb, to the point where I thought it was trying to be dumb, and so I scoffed and looked away. Then, some time later, I watched it again, with friends this time, and I saw for the first time the true genius that is Seann William Scott. This film is comic perfection, as quotable as Napoleon Dynamite, except nobody ever quotes it so it's not nearly as annoying. My favorite conversation is 'Hey look, a barn!' 'Is it red?' 'No.' 'Then it's not a barn!' Right, I know, not that funny in writing, but in the context of the movies, as with most quotes, it is hilarious. Don't be lame - don't listen to those who are too cool for this movie, as I once was. Embrace it, and just laugh.

 

Like what you're reading?

Subscribe
Search
  Go

Browse previous
<November 2009>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Dig through the archives

Categories
 


Advertisement