Review: 28 years later by Danny Boyle is evilly unbridled of Punk Rock energy

Review: 28 years later by Danny Boyle is evilly unbridled of Punk Rock energy

Danny Boyle He is not interested in giving you a comfortable horror experience, and that’s exactly why 28 years later It affects so strong. The third voice in the saga of the Rage virus is raw, relentless and absolutely unbridled in the best way.

From his opening moments, this film is announced with punk-rock energy and does not surrender. It is not here to deliver a safe and nest sequel. It is here to push your face into the mud, to snatch your heart and somehow makes you feel something in the middle of chaos. I loved this movie!

Boyle, working again with the writer Alex Garlanddoes not only come back to the world of 28 days laterIt reinvents it and gives the public something unexpected and crazy.

The film focuses on a remote island community still in quarantine almost three decades after the outbreak of the virus. A father (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) He takes his 12 -year -old son, Spike, on a dangerous rite of passage in the mainland, a place where the monsters infected with wandering anger and survival is a form of brutal art. Immediately, you are immersed in a world where violence is routine and childhood has not placed.

Spike’s father pushes him in danger and is proud when Spike makes his first killing. Their dynamic never feels manipulative; Instead, it is a robust portrait of a parent who holds a warrior from a child, regardless of the cost. It’s a wild film for maturity!

It is seriously a story of maturity soaked in blood. Spike’s first mission is intense and traumatic like anything has shown us the franchise, but what is striking is how normal it is everything.

Boyle does not jump. The horror here is not only the infect, he is looking at a child to be modeled in a survivor in a world that no longer allows innocence. Alfie WilliamsPlaying Spike, gives honest and compelling performance. It is a type of quiet emotional power that cuts the carnage.

Things change march when Spike returns from his first adventure to the mainland. Her mother is sick and is terrified and desperate, so the boy’s sangaiola outside their community to find a doctor who is said to be deep in the mainland.

What follows is a hard but strangely beautiful survival journey. We are treated with splendid northern British landscapes, quiet forests, hills desserts, fallen cities, all crawling with the danger of the infected, and are equally terrifying as they have never evolved in different ways.

One thing he does 28 years later So fascinating is that it is more reflective than the previous voices, interested not only with jumping scars or chase sequences, although it has PL; Enty of those moments, but in the emotional scars left behind.

Ralph Fiennes Play the mysterious doctor, a figure we take will be unbalanced, but it turns out to be one of the most human characters in the film. His scenes with Spike offer something rare in this franchise … tenderness. But in a dark, twisted and WTF way.

Visually, the film is fantastic. I love the energetic and unique cinematographic style of Boyle that merges the portable chaos with pictorial shots, giving the film is an immediacy and a disturbing beauty. Editing occasionally cuts in movies and surreal images, transforming parts of the film into something that seems to be a fragmented memory of a civilization that has long since disappeared.

Add the Grytty Sound Design and a Moonful soundtrack, and you have a film experience that seems alive and constantly to the limit.

Not everyone will be on board with where this movie goes. Some narrative choices are bizarre. The third act takes in particular some wild oscillations that certainly divide the spectators. The end of the film in particular was so unexpected and crazy, but I loved the film for that! I loved the ending!

28 years later He doesn’t care about playing us safely. It is a bold evolution of the franchise that asks for more from its audience emotionally, intellectually and viscerally. And if you are willing to go on for the trip, reward you with an extraordinary cinematographic experience.

In the end, this is not just a great horror sequel, it is an extraordinary in the genre. Boyle and Garland made a fierce, unpredictable and unexpectedly moving film. It is an elegy soaked in blood for a world that has fallen apart and a powerful reminder that even in the darkest times, a fragment of humanity can still shine.

By Joey Gour
Source: Geek Tyrant

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