Later... — 28 Days
Unlike traditional zombies, the Infected are living humans consumed by uncontrollable fury, succumbing to the virus in as little as 10 to 20 seconds through blood or saliva transmission.
The Legacy of 28 Days Later: How Rage Redefined Horror Released in 2002, didn’t just revive the zombie genre; it fundamentally altered its DNA. Directed by Danny Boyle and written by Alex Garland , the film swapped slow, lumbering ghouls for "the Infected"—victims of a "Rage Virus" who sprinted with primal, terrifying speed. Shot on low-resolution digital video to capture a gritty, surveillance-like realism, the film remains a landmark of British horror. The Outbreak: "Hello" to a New World 28 Days Later...
Animal rights activists accidentally release a lab-grown, Ebola-based "Rage Virus" while attempting to free chimpanzees. Unlike traditional zombies, the Infected are living humans
The film begins with a hauntingly quiet sequence: bicycle courier (Cillian Murphy) wakes from a 28-day coma in an abandoned London hospital. He emerges to find a city drained of life, an iconic sequence that remains one of the most celebrated in cinema history. Shot on low-resolution digital video to capture a
