Tag: 28-days-later

  • ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Cast Interview

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    Opening in theaters on January 16th is ‘28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’, which is a follow up to last summer’s ’28 Years Later’ and is the fourth installment of the ‘28 Days Later‘ franchise.

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    Written by Alex Garland (‘Civil War’), produced by Danny Boyle (’Steve Jobs’) and directed by Nia DaCosta (‘The Marvels’), the film stars returning franchise actors Ralph Fiennes (‘Conclave’) as Dr. Ian Kelson, Alfie Williams (‘His Dark Materials’) as Spike, Jack O’Connell (‘Sinners’) as Sir Lord Jimmy Crystal, and Chi Lewis-Parry (’The Running Man’) as Samson, as well as new addition to the series, Erin Kellyman (‘Eleanor the Great’).

    (L to R) Chi Lewis-Parry and Ralph Fiennes star in '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'.
    (L to R) Chi Lewis-Parry and Ralph Fiennes star in ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Ralph Fiennes and Chi Lewis-Parry about their work on ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’, reprising their characters from ’28 Years Later,’ working together to create their characters unusual friendship on screen, and director Nia DaCosta’s unique vision for this world.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Fiennes, Lewis-Parry, and Erin Kellyman.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ’28 Years Later’

    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Ralph, can you talk about having the opportunity to play this character over the course of two films and what were some of the aspects of this character you were excited to explore this time around that you didn’t get a chance to explore in the last movie?

    Ralph Fiennes: Well, yes, it’s great. Look, it’s great to play a part over two films. I don’t think I’ve done it before. No, of course I have with Voldemort (in the ‘Harry Potter’ series) and M (in the James Bond movies), I suppose. But this narrative is more in favor of Kelson’s story and Samson’s story together. Alex (Garland) has written a great part. We understand he’s a doctor, he takes palliative care of Jodie Comer‘s character in the last film. We understand he has that doctor’s instinct for care but he’s in a situation where he’s reliant on survival techniques. But I think this heightens his medical curiosity, which is also a human curiosity, isn’t it? If I want to cure someone, it’s because I believe in the value of mending a fellow human being. I think that’s totally innate to Kelson. His desire to mend, heal, and where he must accept death, it’s a recognition of the life that has been lived by the person who has died. I think he’s profoundly connected to the human experience and what it is to have lived and died. He’s got a mixture of the medic and the philosopher, and I think that’s explored in this. We see his goodness, and in the end, he puts himself on the line to protect young Spike (Alfie Williams). I think he’s a good guy.

    Samson (Chi Lewis-Parry) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Samson (Chi Lewis-Parry) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Chi, what was your approach to playing Samson and what are the challenges of portraying a character who is infected?

    Chi Lewis-Parry: The cold, that was a big challenge. Dealing with the cold while being mostly naked, I found that the cold can really zap your energy. Samson is a very high energy character, and if he’s not high energy, he’s sitting or lying down, and again, exposed to the cold. It’s a mental state. Once the mind gives up, I feel like the body follows and then you’re in an uncontrollable shiver and that’s not good on camera. There was a mental stamina that I had to have to still appear like this big physically imposing destroyer in Samson. It was tough but manageable.

    Nia DaCosta (director, '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple') at CinemaCon 2025 for Sony Pictures at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace on March 31, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    Nia DaCosta (director, ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’) at CinemaCon 2025 for Sony Pictures at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace on March 31, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.

    MF: Ralph, what was it like working with director Nia DaCosta and can you talk about her unique vision for this world?

    RF: Well, she was intent to come with a different filming approach. I think she made that clear to Danny (Boyle) and Alex, she didn’t want to ever attempt to imitate Danny’s directorial style. She came with a forensic delicacy. She loves the closeups and what’s going on inside the face of someone. The closeup is a great magnifier of human thought in a life and I think she’s edited the film to allow the closeups to breathe and I like that.

    (L to R) Samson (Chi Lewis-Parry) and Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Samson (Chi Lewis-Parry) and Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’. Photo: Miya Mizuno. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Chi, can you talk about Samson’s unusual friendship with Dr. Kelson and what it was like working on the relationship with Ralph?

    CLP: It was a complete dream come true. The relationship on screen is very much the relationship we have in real life because I have an affection for the man. I don’t hide it. If anything, I celebrate it. I think to have discovered a friend in this medium, I suppose, is odd and rare, especially one with such affection because I adore him, and he knows that. I’m so proud of being a part of this wonderful experience, and this wonderful film. I can’t wait for the universe to see it.

    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, Ralph, what was your experience like working with Chi on this project?

    RF: Working with Chi was wonderful. He’s generous. He’s committed. He’s always present, ready to go, and ready to give of himself in the moment. That’s what you want with a good screen partner is that we dance together literally but we also dance together in our energies. He doesn’t speak much but all these scenes, he was transmitting feelings and thoughts and interior impulses which I could see in his face. That’s stuff just emerged between us. He comes onto the set with this wonderful generosity of spirit, and that’s rare.

    (L to R) Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) and Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell) in Columbia Pictures’ '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple'. Photo: Courtesy of Sony Pictures. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) and Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’. Photo: Courtesy of Sony Pictures. © 2025 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’?

    Taking place after the events of the previous film, Spike (Alfie Williams) is inducted into Sir Jimmy Crystal’s (Jack O’Connell) gang of acrobatic killers in a post-apocalyptic Britain ravaged by the Rage Virus. Meanwhile, Dr Ian Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) forms a new relationship with potentially world changing consequences.

    Who is in the cast of ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’?

    • Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson
    • Jack O’Connell as Sir Lord Jimmy Crystal
    • Alfie Williams as Spike
    • Erin Kellyman as Jimmy Ink
    • Chi Lewis-Parry as “Samson”
    • Emma Laird as Jimmima
    • Maura Bird as Jimmy Jones
    • Ghazi Al Ruffai as Jimmy Snake
    • Sam Locke as Jimmy Fox
    '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple' opens in theaters on January 16th.
    ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ opens in theaters on January 16th.

    List of Films in the ’28’ Franchise:

    Buy Tickets: ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Ralph Fiennes Movies On Amazon

  • Every Danny Boyle Directed Movie Ranked!

    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.
    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.

    Director Danny Boyle is one of the most accomplished and acclaimed filmmakers of his generation.

    His breakthrough film was 1996’s ‘Trainspotting‘, and he followed it up with such successful and popular movies as ‘28 Days Later‘, ‘Sunshine‘, ‘127 Hours‘, ‘Steve Jobs‘, ‘Yesterday‘, and ‘Slumdog Millionaire‘, which earned him an Oscar for Best Director.

    His latest movie, ‘28 Years Later‘, which is a follow up to his 2003 Zombie classic, opens in theaters on June 20th.

    In honor of the new film, Moviefone is ranking every movie Danny Boyle has ever directed, from infected to healthy.

    Let’s begin!


    14. ‘Millions‘ (2004)

    Alex Etel in 'Millions'. Photo: Pathé Distribution.
    Alex Etel in ‘Millions’. Photo: Pathé Distribution.

    Two boys, still grieving the death of their mother, find themselves the unwitting benefactors of a bag of bank robbery loot in the week before the United Kingdom switches its official currency to the Euro. What’s a kid to do?

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    13. ‘The Beach‘ (2000)

    Leonardo DiCaprio in 'The Beach'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    Leonardo DiCaprio in ‘The Beach’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Twenty-something Richard (Leonardo DiCaprio) travels to Thailand and finds himself in possession of a strange map. Rumors state that it leads to a solitary beach paradise, a tropical bliss – excited and intrigued, he sets out to find it.

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    12. ‘A Life Less Ordinary‘ (1997)

    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz in 'A Life Less Ordinary'. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.
    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Cameron Diaz in ‘A Life Less Ordinary’. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.

    A couple of angels, O’Reilly (Holly Hunter) and Jackson (Delroy Lindo), are sent to Earth to make sure that their next supervised love-connection succeeds. They follow Celine (Cameron Diaz), a spoiled rich girl who has just accidentally shot a suitor and, due to a misunderstanding, is kidnapped by janitor Robert (Ewan McGregor). Although Celine quickly frees herself, she stays with Robert for thrills. O’Reilly and Jackson pursue, hoping to unite the prospective lovers.

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    11. ‘Shallow Grave‘ (1995)

    (L to R) Christopher Eccleston, Kerry Fox and Ewan McGregor in 'Shallow Grave'. Photo: Rank Film Distributors.
    (L to R) Christopher Eccleston, Kerry Fox and Ewan McGregor in ‘Shallow Grave’. Photo: Rank Film Distributors.

    When David (Christopher Eccleston), Juliet (Kerry Fox), and Alex (Ewan McGregor) find their new roommate dead with a large sum of money, they agree to hide the body and keep the cash. However, this newfound fortune gradually corrodes their friendship.

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    10. ‘T2 Trainspotting‘ (2017)

    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller in 'T2 Trainspotting'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Ewan McGregor and Jonny Lee Miller in ‘T2 Trainspotting’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

    After 20 years abroad, Mark Renton (Ewan McGregor) returns to Scotland and reunites with his old friends Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller), Spud (Ewan Bremner) and Begbie (Robert Carlyle).

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    9. ‘127 Hours‘ (2011)

    James Franco in '127 Hours'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    James Franco in ‘127 Hours’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    The true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston’s (James Franco) remarkable adventure to save himself after a fallen boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated canyon in Utah.

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    8. ‘Yesterday‘ (2019)

    Himesh Patel in 'Yesterday'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Himesh Patel in ‘Yesterday’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    A struggling musician (Himesh Patel) realizes he’s the only person on Earth who can remember The Beatles after waking up in an alternate reality where the group was forgotten.

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    7. ‘Trance‘ (2013)

    (L to R) Vincent Cassel, James McAvoy and Rosario Dawson in 'Trance'. Photo:
    (L to R) Vincent Cassel, James McAvoy and Rosario Dawson in ‘Trance’. Photo:

    A violent gang enlists the help of a hypnotherapist (Rosario Dawson) in an attempt to locate a painting which somehow vanished in the middle of a heist.

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    6. ‘28 Years Later‘ (2025)

    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s been almost three decades since the rage virus escaped a biological weapons laboratory, and now, still in a ruthlessly enforced quarantine, some have found ways to exist amidst the infected. One such group of survivors lives on a small island connected to the mainland by a single, heavily-defended causeway. When one of the group leaves the island on a mission into the dark heart of the mainland, he discovers secrets, wonders, and horrors that have mutated not only the infected but other survivors as well.

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    5. ‘Sunshine‘ (2007)

    Chris Evans in 'Sunshine'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Chris Evans in ‘Sunshine’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Fifty years into the future, the sun is dying, and Earth is threatened by arctic temperatures. A team of astronauts is sent to revive the Sun — but the mission fails. Seven years later, a new team is sent to finish the mission as mankind’s last hope.

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    4. ‘Slumdog Millionaire‘ (2008)

    (L to R) Dev Patel and Anil Kapoor in 'Slumdog Millionaire'. Photo: Pathé Distribution.
    (L to R) Dev Patel and Anil Kapoor in ‘Slumdog Millionaire’. Photo: Pathé Distribution.

    A teenager (Dev Patel) reflects on his life after being accused of cheating on the Indian version of ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire?‘.

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    3. ‘Steve Jobs‘ (2015)

    Michael Fassbender in 'Steve Jobs'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Michael Fassbender in ‘Steve Jobs’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Set backstage at three iconic product launches and ending in 1998 with the unveiling of the iMac, Steve Jobs (Michael Fassbender) takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

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    2. ‘28 Days Later‘ (2003)

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Twenty-eight days after a killer virus was accidentally unleashed from a British research facility, a small group of London survivors are caught in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. Carried by animals and humans, the virus turns those it infects into homicidal maniacs — and it’s absolutely impossible to contain.

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    1. ‘Trainspotting‘ (1996)

    Ewan McGregor in 'Trainspotting'. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.
    Ewan McGregor in ‘Trainspotting’. Photo: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment.

    Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) and his wife Etheline (Anjelica Huston) had three children (Ben Stiller, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Luke Wilson) and then they separated. All three children are extraordinary — all geniuses. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. Most of this was generally considered to be their father’s fault. “The Royal Tenenbaums” is the story of the family’s sudden, unexpected reunion one recent winter.

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  • Movie Review: ’28 Years Later’

    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    ’28 Years Later’ receives 8 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters on June 20 is ’28 Years Later,’ directed by Danny Boyle and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jodie Comer, Ralph Fiennes, Alfie Williams, and Jack O’Connell.

    Related Article: Cillian Murphy Does Not Appear in ‘28 Years Later’ Producer Andrew Macdonald Confirms

    Initial Thoughts

    An infected in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    An infected in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Director Danny Boyle’s ’28 Days Later,’ released in 2003, gave a fresh new spark of life (pardon the expression) to the reanimated dead. Well, hold up: the rabid, frenzied, flesh-tearing creatures of Boyle’s groundbreaking film were not zombies risen from the grave, but living humans infected with a powerful bioweapon – nicknamed the Rage Virus – that turned them into fast-moving, savage, homicidal murderers within minutes.

    Boyle’s overwhelmingly violent Infected (as they came to be called), the use of digital video cameras for maximum flexibility, the filming in real locations, and the emphasis on character – particularly Cillian Murphy’s Jim – all contributed to the movie’s success and its impact on the zombie subgenre of horror, no matter what Boyle called his monsters. ’28 Weeks Later,’ a lackluster sequel without the involvement of either Boyle or writer Alex Garland (later to write and direct ‘Ex Machina,’ ‘Civil War,’ and ‘Warfare’), followed five years later, and rumors have persisted ever since about a third movie – with Boyle allegedly interested in returning.

    Now it’s happened: Boyle and Garland have returned respectively to direct and write ’28 Years Later,’ which – as the title confirms – takes place decades after the initial outbreak of the Rage Virus. And true to form, the two filmmakers have once again crafted a horror epic that, while it may not feel as groundbreaking as the original, is incredibly intense, visceral, and atmospheric, while providing characters whose fates we come to care very much about.

    Story and Direction

    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.
    Director Danny Boyle for Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Anthony Ghnassia.

    An opening card tells us that the Rage Virus was driven back from continental Europe but confined to the British mainland, with a strict quarantine in place and the survivors inside left to fend for themselves. Admittedly, there’s a rather large hole in the story here if you want to think about it: have there really been no attempts in nearly three decades to contact anyone living inside the quarantine zone, or find a way to rescue them? Perhaps Boyle and Garland are saying something about the transactional, indifferent relationship among nations now, in which a nation’s collapse leads others to push away as if they don’t want to get caught in its wake and pulled under with it, but it still sits there as a gap in the worldbuilding.

    Otherwise that worldbuilding is largely well-handled. The bulk of the film takes place among the community of Holy Island, a thousand-acre patch floating off the coast and connected by a causeway. The community there is a rural, agrarian one, isolating themselves with heavy fortifications at the causeway entrance and the water around them doing the rest (their form of government is never quite explained, but they’re damn good at throwing drunken, almost ritualistic parties).

    It’s here we meet 12-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams), his dad Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his mum Isla (Jodie Comer), as Spike prepares for a kind of rite of passage in which he and his dad will cross the causeway to the mainland so that Spike can kill his first Infected. Isla, however, is not completely on board with it, but can’t do much about it either: she is suffering from a malady that causes her great pain, mood disorders, and memory loss, and since Holy Island has no doctors there is no way to determine what is afflicting her.

    (L to R) Director Danny Boyle with Aaron Taylor-Johnson on the set of Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Danny Boyle with Aaron Taylor-Johnson on the set of Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Jamie and Spike’s trip to the mainland – the rules are that if they don’t come back, no one will go out to look for them – is not exactly a walk in the park. They’re pursued by both slow-moving Infected that have bloated into almost slug-like form and the fast-moving brand seen in the previous two movies, only now mostly filthy, naked, and barely recognizable as human. There are also “alphas,” leader-type Infected whose bodies have been expanded to strongman proportions by the Rage Virus and are, if anything, even more relentless and brutal than the regular flavor.

    Spike makes his first kill, although he bungles the rest (“the more you kill, the easier it gets,” his dad offers helpfully), and learns that there is an insane man living further out in the land who may have once been a doctor. “There are strange people on the mainland,” Jamie warns, but after father and son return to Holy Island and a lavish celebration – during which Spike sees Jamie do something that is hurtful to the boy – Spike turns on his dad, smuggles Isla from the house, and secretly takes her to the mainland, where he hopes to locate the doctor, Ian Kelson, and see if he can make his mother well again.

    All this plays out in a visual aesthetic that pays homage to the original film but enhances it. Boyle uses up to 20 iPhones to shoot some sequences, including a sort of version of “bullet time” for a number of the film’s very gory kills. Yet the film is also shot in an ultra-wide 2:76:1 ratio, giving it an expansive feel while retaining the intimacy of the original movie. The editing is quick, as in ’28 Days,’ and often choppy, mirroring the chaos of the world in which the story is set, while certain scenes – like Spike and Jamie’s frantic dash back on the causeway against a glittering star-filled sky – have a dark fairy tale patina to them.

    (L to R) Jodie Comer and Director Danny Boyle on the set of Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jodie Comer and Director Danny Boyle on the set of Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    There are other sequences, some even in broad daylight with the backdrop of pristine green fields and mountains behind them, that border on nightmarish due to the frightening assault of the Infected at nearly every turn. There are moments of beauty as well, such as a late scene between Spike and Isla in the temple of bones glimpsed in the trailers. And there are bucketfuls of in-your-face gore as the Infected kill or are killed, with plenty of guts, gouts of blood, and decapitated heads on hand (not to mention one skin-crawling yet eventually poignant scene on an abandoned train) to firmly establish this new entry’s credentials for the zombie horror crowd.

    But best of all, there is a great story behind it all, anchored by terrific characters like Jamie, Spike, Isla, and later, Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes). Although the script can feel episodic and there are some shifts in tone here and there that don’t quite line up, the fate of these people and the ordeal they go through is riveting enough to carry the movie to an ending that some folks may find irritating (because it all but advertises the sequel, ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,’ which is due out next January).

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Spike (Alfie Williams), Isla (Jodie Comer) and Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Spike (Alfie Williams), Isla (Jodie Comer) and Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    There are three outstanding performances in ’28 Years Later.’ The first is by Alfie Williams, making his motion picture debut as Spike. This is really Spike’s story, a chronicle of his passage from brave but still nervous boy into a stronger, more resilient, more mature warrior, and Williams handles it with confidence, charisma, and a lack of standard child actor tricks.

    Next is Jodie Comer, whose Isla takes more of a central role in the film’s second half as she and Spike venture onto the mainland. Her body and mind wracked by her illness, Isla is trying to break through the fog that envelops her even as her memories splinter and merge. The excellent Comer portrays all this with great empathy and a tragic nobility, showing us why she’s one of the best actors to emerge in recent years.

    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    And then there’s Ralph Fiennes, whose Dr. Kelson seems genuinely eccentric and bizarrely funny when we first meet him, but who deepens into a figure of great compassion and dignity even if he walks around coated in iodine (“the Rage Virus doesn’t like it at all,” he notes). Fiennes brings his effortless gravitas to a role that could have been a stock nutty survivalist but is instead imbued with humanity and grace. His bone temple is a “memento mori,” a remembrance of the dead, that has a stark beauty all its own, and Fiennes’ work reflects that.

    As for Aaron Taylor-Johnson, he’s fine. Sturdy, fearless, rugged, Jamie is a pillar of the community, a loving but tough dad, and unfortunately a flawed man who loses the trust of his son. But the character is not as deeply portrayed as the others, and largely sits out the second half of the movie. The other notable player is Edvin Ryding as Erik, a Swedish soldier who gets trapped on the mainland and spends some time with Spike and Isla. Ryding provides some welcome comic relief as he describes modern conveniences in the outside world that Spike has no idea exist – and gets a big laugh when she shows Spike a photo of his cosmetically enhanced girlfriend, whose filler-boosted face remains Spike of a friend’s allergic reaction to shellfish.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and his son Spike (Alfie Williams) being chased on the causeway in Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Like ’28 Days Later,’ and unlike, say, the socio-politically minded zombie films of George A. Romero, ’28 Years Later’ shies away from sociological or political themes. Yet there is something here about the way that societies crumble so quickly and yet take so long to reform, as well as the way in which humans can fall so rapidly into savagery. There are tantalizing questions raised about who or what else lives on the mainland, as well as what exactly is going on in the outside world, some of which will perhaps be answered in ‘The Bone Temple’ or a third film.

    But what these films do continue to be about – aside from Boyle and Garland providing audiences with an intense, heart-pounding experience from start to finish – is the way in which individual human beings will strive to be kind and do good even among the most horrific of circumstances. Whether it’s in 28 days, 28 weeks, or 28 years, this is a message that bears repeating.

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    What is the plot of ’28 Years Later’?

    It’s been almost three decades since the Rage Virus escaped a bioweapons laboratory, and now, still in a ruthlessly enforced quarantine, some have found ways to exist amidst the infected. When one of a group of survivors leaves their heavily defended island on a mission to the mainland, he discovers horrors that have mutated not only the infected but other survivors as well.

    Who is in the cast of ’28 Years Later’?

    • Jodie Comer as Isla
    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Jamie
    • Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson
    • Alfie Williams as Spike
    • Christopher Fulford as Sam
    • Edvin Ryding as Erik Sundqvist
    • Chi Lewis-Parry as Samson
    • Jack O’Connell as Sir Jimmy Crystal
    Columbia Pictures' '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Columbia Pictures’ ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Movies Similar to ‘28 Years Later’:

    Buy Tickets: ’28 Years Later’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Aaron Taylor-Johnson Movies on Amazon

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  • Cillian Murphy Does Not Appear in ‘28 Years Later’

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Cillian Murphy is not in new zombie outing ‘28 Years Later.’
    • One of the infected who looks a little like him shows up in the trailer.
    • Murphy is a producer behind the scenes.

    We know him these days as the ‘OppenheimerOscar winner and star of the popular ‘Peaky Blinders’ crime series out of the UK (which itself has a big screen version on the way), but back in 2002, Cillian Murphy had a few film and TV credits to his name but broke out in a big way thanks to Danny Boyle’s horror thriller ‘28 Days Later,’ which drew praise for its inventive take on the zombie genre (more on that below), its guerilla filming style and intensity.

    The movie spawned a sequel, 2007’s ‘28 Weeks Later,’ but Murphy didn’t return for that one, nor did Boyle or writer Alex Garland, aside from being executive producers.

    Fast-forward a good few years to now and Boyle is back, alongside Garland (who has since gone on to enjoy a healthy directing career himself) for a new planned trilogy kicking off later this year with ‘28 Years Later.’ And following the launch of the first teaser trailer a few weeks ago speculation has been rife that Murphy shows up as a skeletally thin member of the infected.

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    When in fact… it’s not him.

    Producer Andrew Macdonald confirmed to Empire that the shambling creature is, in fact, not played by Murphy:

    “On this, we wanted him to be involved and he wanted to be involved. He is not in the first film, but I’m hoping there will be some Jim somewhere along the line. He’s involved at the moment as an executive producer, and I would hope we can work with him in some way in the future in the trilogy.”

    As for Boyle, he told the film magazine that his partner warned him of the similarity…

    “I showed my girlfriend the trailer and she said, ‘People will think that’s Cillian.’ I said, ‘Don’t be silly.’ I ignored her. So I’ve eaten a bit of humble pie since.”

    What’s the story of ‘28 Days Later’?

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson in '28 Years Later'. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson in ’28 Years Later’. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.

    ‘28 Days Later’ sees Murphy starring as Jim, a bike courier who has been in an accident and awakens from a coma to discover that London –– and the rest of the UK–– has been overtaken by a virus that turns its victims into rage-filled monsters who savage their victims.

    While the “Z” word is never used, the Infected, for all their fast speed, are certainly a take on the genre.

    28 Weeks Later’, which was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, picked up the story months later as the country is slowly cleared of the infected, with evacuated civilians returning –– even as the danger persists.

    As the title suggests, ‘28 Years Later’ will then spin the clock forward nearly three decades to see what life is like for the people who are making a go of living in the country –– and the fact that while the Infected are still a threat, the original movie’s theme of man’s inhumanity to man, even in the case of a unifying situation, also emerges.

    Boyle and Garland are back as director and writer for ‘28 Years,’ which is kicking off the new trilogy. The cast includes Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ralph Fiennes, Jodie Comer, Jack O’Connell, Erin Kellyman and Alfie Williams.

    Candyman’s Nia DaCosta has picked up the baton, directing ‘28 Years: The Bone Temple.’ The third movie has yet to be detailed.

    Related Article: Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes on for ‘28 Years Later’

    Who is the “Infected” in the trailer?

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    After the internet lit up with chatter about the Infected in the trailer looking strikingly like Murphy, British art director Angus Neill told the UK’s Guardian newspaper that he’s behind the prosthetic:

    “Danny told me he’d always had me in mind for the role. So we met up, hit it off, and I agreed to take part. On set he has an extraordinary ability to hypnotize you and working with him on the film was a very, very intense experience.”

    You can see Neill’s professional Instagram listing here:

     

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    While Sony Pictures has yet to officially comment, Neill certainly looks the part.

    Where can I see Cillian Murphy, then?

    Cillian Murphy in 'Peaky Blinders'.
    Cillian Murphy in ‘Peaky Blinders’. Photo: Netflix.

    It’s not like Murphy is hurting for work –– he was in demand even before Christopher Nolan directed him to an Academy Award.

    Murphy was most recently seen in indie title ‘Small Things Like These,’ which itself is drawing some awards attention.

    He will be back on our screens in the aforementioned ‘Peaky Blinders’ movie for Netflix, reprising the role of crime boss Tommy Shelby. The film has yet to confirm a launch date.

    Then there’s comedy drama ‘Steve,’ in which he plays the titular headteacher who is battling for his reform college’s survival while managing his mental health.

    Finally, he’s attached to star in based-on-truth crime/mining drama ‘Blood Runs Coal.’

    When will ‘28 Years Later’ be in theaters?

    ‘28 Years Later’ is currently scheduled to infect theaters on June 20th.

    DaCosta’s ‘28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,’ meanwhile, will follow on January 16th, 2026.

    (L to R) Rose Byrne and Jeremy Renner in '28 Weeks Later'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    (L to R) Rose Byrne and Jeremy Renner in ’28 Weeks Later’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Movies Similar to ‘28 Years Later’:

    Buy ‘28 Days Later‘ on Amazon

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  • Jodie Comer and Aaron Taylor-Johnson Starring in ‘28 Years Later’

    (Left) Jodie Comer as Kathy in 20th Century Studios' 'The Bikeriders'. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved. (Center) Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in 'Kraven the Hunter.' (Right) Ralph Fiennes in Searchlight Pictures' 'The Menu.'
    (Left) Jodie Comer as Kathy in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Bikeriders’. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved. (Center) Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in ‘Kraven the Hunter.’ (Right) Ralph Fiennes in Searchlight Pictures’ ‘The Menu.’

    Preview:

    • Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes are starring in ‘28 Years Later’
    • Danny Boyle and Alex Garland are behind the new movie.
    • Sony is distributing the movie, the start of a trilogy of films.

    After many years in the wild weeds of speculation and rumor, director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland finally confirmed that they’re getting back to the world they created with 2002’s ‘28 Days Later’ for a brand new follow-up called ‘28 Years Later’.

    And far from just making one movie, their plan is actually to launch a trilogy, with Garland writing all three and Boyle directing the first. The initial round of casting has begun with Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes joining the movie per Deadline.

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    What’s the story of the ‘28 Days Later’ movies?

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.'
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    2002’s original movie saw Cillian Murphy playing Jim, a bicycle courier left in a coma after an accident. He awakes nearly a month later to discover London and the wider world have gone to hell after animal rights activists released a chimp infected with a virulent, genetically engineered plague that has spread to the population, leaving the city near deserted and haunted by roving packs of the rage-driven ‘infected’.

    That was followed by ‘28 Weeks Later’ in 2007, which saw Juan Carlos Fresnadillo taking over directorial duties, with Boyle and Garland stepping back to be executive producers. The sequel is set as American forces arrive to help clean up Britain, civilians caught in the crossfire between soldiers and the remaining infected.

    While the plot of the new movie is being kept under wraps for now, the title points to picking up the story decades after the original and seeing what has happened to the country since then. We’re guessing nothing good, but with Boyle and Garland involved, it’ll be entertaining finding out.

    Who are the new actors playing?

    Bryan Tyree Henry and Aaron Taylor-Johnson star in Sony's 'Bullet Train.'
    (L to R) Bryan Tyree Henry and Aaron Taylor-Johnson star in Sony’s ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield.

    As with the story info, we don’t yet know who the three new actors will be doing in the movie –– but they’re interesting nonetheless, since the 2002 entry was largely cast with rising stars and a few veterans sprinkled into the mix.

    While Comer and Taylor-Johnson aren’t exactly veterans, they’re well established –– and that goes without saying for Fiennes.

    Related Article: Nia DaCosta in Talks to Direct Part Two of ‘28 Years Later’ Trilogy

    What’s happening with the ‘28 Years Later’ trilogy?

    'The Marvels' director Nia DeCosta.
    ‘The Marvels’ director Nia DeCosta.

    With Boyle taking on the first movie, the plan is for him to direct it this year and for production of the second to kick off once the first has wrapped to ensure continuity of storytelling while each director will bring their visual stamp to their movie.

    Nia DaCosta, who handled last year’s ‘The Marvels’ and 2019’s ‘Candyman’ follow-up was reported in talks earlier this month, and according to Deadline’s new story, she’s aboard to direct the second movie.

    When will ‘28 Years Later’ be in theaters?

    Sony, which won the rights to produce and distribute the new movies, has yet to announce a release date for any of them.

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.'
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Movies Similar to ‘28 Years Later’:

    Buy ‘28 Days Later‘ on Amazon

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  • Nia DaCosta in Talks for Second ‘28 Years Later Movie’

    (Left) Director Nia DaCosta on the set of Marvel Studios' 'The Marvels.' Photo by Laura Radford. © 2023 Marvel (Right) Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    (Left) Director Nia DaCosta on the set of Marvel Studios’ ‘The Marvels.’ Photo by Laura Radford. © 2023 Marvel (Right) Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Nia DaCosta may direct the second ‘28 Years Later’ movie.
    • Director Danny Boyle and writer Andrew Garland are overseeing the extended horror franchise.
    • The movie continues the story started in ‘2002’s 28 Days Later’.

    Back in January, we learned that Danny Boyle and Alex Garland had finally started putting concrete plans in place to craft another follow up to zombie movie ‘28 Days Later’, after years of speculation.

    Things have moved on since that initial news –– Sony Pictures has agreed to finance and distribute what is now planned as a trilogy of films, and Nia DaCosta, who has made the likes of ‘Little Woods’, 2019’s ‘Candyman’ and last year’s ‘The Marvels’, is in talks to direct the second movie in the three-film series.

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    What’s the story of the ‘28 Days Later’ films so far?

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.'
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Released in 2002, ’28 Days Later’ starred Cillian Murphy as a bicycle courier Jim, who wakes up from a coma to discover that London –– and the world –– has been overtaken by a virus that turns its victims into rage-filled monsters who savage their victims.

    While the “Z” word is never used, the Infected, for all their fast speed are certainly a take on the zombie genre.

    ‘28 Days Later’ was followed directly by 2007’s ‘28 Weeks Later’, which was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, with Boyle and Garland only involved as executive producers.

    The plot for ‘28 Years Later’ being kept under wraps for now, the title points to picking up the story decades after the original and seeing what has happened to the UK since then.

    Related Article: Danny Boyle and Alex Garland Developing ‘28 Days Later’ Sequel

    What’s the plan for the ‘28 Years Later’ trilogy?

    Director Alex Garland on the set of 'Civil War.'
    (Right) Director Alex Garland on the set of ‘Civil War.’ Photo: A24.

    As of right now, the plan appears to be for Garland –– who, since the original, has gone on to quite the filmmaking career himself –– to write and produce all three movies.

    Boyle, who is also a producer, is aboard to direct the first movie in the new trilogy.

    According to Deadline’s new report, if DaCosta does indeed sign on, the strategy is for her to closely liaise with both Boyle and Garland so as to keep the storytelling consistent between all the movies, while also being given the freedom to put her own stamp on the look of the movie.

    Murphy, who has yet to confirm whether he’ll appear in front of the camera, is certainly attached to be an executive producer on this one.

    When will the first movie of the new ‘28 Years Later’ trilogy be in theaters?

    With shooting taking aim at later this year, we don’t see this one releasing much before late 2025 at the earliest.

    'The Marvels' director Nia DeCosta.
    ‘The Marvels’ director Nia DeCosta.

    Movies Similar to ‘28 Days Later’:

    Buy ‘28 Days Later‘ on Amazon

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  • Danny Boyle Planning ‘28 Days Later’ Sequel Movie

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.'
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Preview:

    • ‘28 Years Later’ will pick up the story of the classic horror pic.
    • Boyle will direct with Garland writing.
    • The aim is to launch a new trilogy.

    Back in 2002, director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland breathed new life into the zombie genre by creating ‘28 Days Later’, which saw Cillian Murphy starring as a man who wakes up from a coma to discover that London –– and the world –– has been overtaken by a virus that turns its victims into rage-filled monsters who savage their victims.

    While the “Z” word is never used, the Infected, for all their fast speed are certainly a take on the genre.

    ‘28 Days Later’ was followed directly by 2007’s ‘28 Weeks Later’, which was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, with Boyle and Garland only involved as executive producers.

    Now, though, after years of the filmmaking pair talking up the idea of another sequel to the original, it appears they’ve officially come up with a concept they like.

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    What’s happening with the new ‘28 Days Later’ sequel?

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.'
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Boyle and Garland are now ready to pitch a movie called ‘28 Years Later’. While the plot is being kept under wraps for now, the title points to picking up the story decades after the original and seeing what has happened to the country since then. We’re guessing nothing good, but with Boyle and Garland involved, it’ll be entertaining finding out.

    As of right now, the plan is for Boyle to direct the new movie and Garland to write it. And it’s not just an idea for one movie –– the pair has plans to make a new trilogy based on the concept with Garland writing all three and a planned $75 million budget per movie. Given that his own filmmaking career has evolved since then (his latest movie as a director, ‘Civil War’ is out this April), there’s a chance Garland might step up to direct one of the others.

    Related Article: Danny Boyle Has Revealed What He Planned For ‘No Time To Die’

    Where will the new movie be seen?

    Danny Boyle attends the Academy’s 7th Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, o
    Danny Boyle attends the Academy’s 7th Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Saturday, November 14, 2015. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    As of right now, Garland and Boyle are, via their agency WME, pitching the idea to studios and streamers, so we’d expect there to be plenty of interest given the known concept and the fact that the people behind the original movie are once more involved.

    Who knows –– if this one is a success, we could see yet another resurgence for the genre, which could use some new ideas after years of ‘The Walking Dead’.

    What’s next for Boyle and Garland?

    Boyle is working on an action-adventure short film called ‘Methuselah’, while, as mentioned, Garland’s ‘Civil War’ will be in theaters on April 26th.

    Kirsten Dunst in 'Civil War.'
    Kirsten Dunst in ‘Civil War.’ Photo: A24.

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  • The 11 Goriest Zombie Movies You Need to See

    The 11 Goriest Zombie Movies You Need to See

  • ‘Annihilation’ Director Alex Garland and Star Oscar Isaac On Crafting a New Sci-Fi Classic

    Alex Garland‘s “Annihilation,” based on the novel by Jeff VanderMeer, is the kind of challenging, uncompromised sci-fi classic that we only get every-so-often, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with such mind-bending behemoths as “2001” and “Blade Runner.”

    Garland, who has been the generation’s premiere voice of heady science fiction (he wrote “Sunshine,” “Dredd,” “28 Days Later,” and wrote and directed “Ex Machina“), elevates the genre further with “Annihilation.” It’s the story of a husband named Kane (Oscar Isaac) and a wife named Lena (Natalie Portman) and how they fall apart before he takes a risky mission to explore an uninhabitable patch of land called Area X. This place is infected with some kind of otherworldly, oily gunk and nicknamed The Shimmer by a shadowy government agency called the Southern Reach.

    After Kane returns, uh, different, Lena and a group of like-minded scientists (including Jennifer Jason Leigh and Tessa Thompson) venture into The Shimmer to try and figure out what, exactly, has happened and how they can stop it. And that’s when things get really weird.

    We were lucky enough to get to chat with Garland and Isaac (reuniting after a memorable collaboration on “Ex Machina”) about what they were influenced by, how they developed the characters, and what (if anything) keen-eyed viewers should look out for.

    Considering how going in blind is the best way to experience “Annihilation,” consider this a SPOILER WARNING.

    MOVIEFONE: When did you first start talking about this? Oscar, were you very eager to do whatever Alex did next?

    Oscar Isaac: Even during “Ex Machina,” I was thinking that I want to do everything that Alex does. So I was very excited when he said he had a script and there was a part in it for me. So I read it and immediately started talking about it and figuring out how I could be involved.

    Did you immediately think about him, Alex?

    Alex Garland: Well, we got to know each other in preparing for “Ex Machina,” in truth. And then we properly stayed in touch. We’re proper friends.

    So, actually, aside from enjoying working together and respecting each other, we properly know each other and I would imagine, and I think the reason I don’t remember ever having first told Oscar about it, is because it would have just come up in conversation. There were other projects that had been floating around my head — and we had been talking about them — but it was always a given for me that I would see if Oscar wanted to do it. It was a default state, really. So there wouldn’t have been a particular moment. It was part of a rolling conversation that hasn’t stopped now.

    Oscar, would you have been walking by in a HAZMAT suit in the background if he’d asked you to?

    Isaac: Yes. I would have asked for a lot of money but …

    Garland: Yeah, he would have, anyway.

    What was it like adapting the novel? And Oscar, did you have input, too? This character is pretty different than what you see in the novel.

    Garland: The adaptation thing was complex in some respects. There were two things about the book that really struck me hard. One was that it was original. It just wasn’t like other books. It wasn’t like other stories. That alone makes it unusual. Most stories we tell are versions of other stories that have already been told — on a holistic level, actually, from themes to plot to characters and everything.

    And the other thing was that it has this extremely strong hallucinogenic atmosphere. With any adaptation, and this is only the third one I’ve done, I try to figure out: What is the thing that I’m adapting? And in this instance, it was the feeling, the experience of reading the book; it was the atmosphere of the book. That was the thing that I was concerned about.

    What about in terms of Oscar’s character?

    Isaac: Well, the character then is in service to that. If the key is the atmosphere and how you translate that, then Kane is, in a way, a tool to explore that. The different phases of how we see Kane, the physicality of that, what is happening, the subtext of all that and how it charges the scene, we spoke about all of that.

    We spoke about what point does Kane know what’s happening with Lena? At what point is the way he’s behaving with her influenced by the knowledge he has or doesn’t have? We talked about that. We talked a bit about where he’s from, and how that affects his speech. For me, we landed on a Northern Florida accent. I grew up in Florida and I had a lot of friends who had that way of speaking. All of those little bits and pieces [were important]. In each individual scene, we would try it different ways to see all of the ways it could go.Were there any touchstones that either of you were looking towards, in the science fiction genre, when crafting this?

    Garland: As much as possible, in a way, you try and shed yourself of the things you love, to rid yourself of them. At a certain point, when I’m working on a film, I stop watching any movies and I stop looking at TV and I stop reading books or anything like that to try and get away. But, of course, you do know those things. They’re tattooed into us, into our awareness. So what you do is, when you’re aware of something you can’t shed, you think about how to subvert it.

    Within the stories that we tell and retell, you tend to end with a punch-up of one sort or another. It might be in a courtroom or in a street, it might be a gunfight or a car chase, but it’s still a punch-up. And you think: How do we have this and acknowledge it but also subvert it? So we had our punch-up super ritualized, but also a literal kind of dance in some respects.

    There’s a bear that appears a few times in the narrative and there it was notionally, you’ve got a monster. In all sorts of films, but particularly science fiction films, a monster will appear. It became how can we subvert the nature of a monster? And also, I want to say, it’s not just about trying to subvert genre tropes. All of these things have to dovetail and support the themes and the story.

    So the bear becomes about the damage. It’s not just a bear, it’s a broken, fractured, tragic character in the narrative and it had to have allusions within it. Like, where did the bear come from? Why did it manifest itself in this house? Does the physical structure of the house echo the house where the marriage takes place? So much of it is organic. I’m not sure if people will ever clock it. But just to draw attention to where things are drawn in the film.

    Oscar’s character has a bear tattoo on his chest, so it’s not a coincidence that the creature that arrives in the house is a bear. And so it goes on.

    Oscar, was he talking to you about all of this stuff?

    Isaac: No. Because what was important was not stuff that was composed. It was stuff that we arrived at organically. Or it was there in the script and it was being teased out. So, what Alex does really well, is he writes a script that has so much depth to it already, but enough ambiguity and mystery that he allows for his collaborators to arrive at things and really feel ownership of them as well. Through that ownership, it’s a very truthful approach. This film has so much to it. It’s deeply horrifying in some ways, there’s a real thrill and beauty to some of these images — they’re so strange and alien, but filled with deep emotion and pain — and also intimate.

    So, for me, what I love most about it is you have these incredibly tense, beautiful, horrible scenarios — but at the same time — there’s a very deep, intimate story about a marriage at the center of it.

    You both just talked about the layers of meaning and symbolism. Is there anything else you want people to keep an eye out for maybe in the second or third viewing?

    Garland: Oh, actually, I was slightly kicking myself for having said that stuff about the bear. Honestly, I think the ideal way to see a movie is to know nothing about the film except right before you walk into the film somebody says to you, “This film is going to be crap.”

    So you have low expectations and no information. So I feel like I’m always weirdly undermining the thing by talking about it. So, no, there isn’t anything I’d say. And I’ll just look back in time and erase the thing I said. But there is some truth in that, because a real sense of discovery is a really pleasurable thing. And not being front-loaded, like, “Look out for this!” Just having a pure experience between a group of people who made a narrative for you to experience and then you get to experience it and make your own mind up. I think there’s something really nice about that.

    Annihilation” infects theaters nationwide tomorrow. Do not miss it (it’s not crap).

  • The 10 Most Unsettling End-of-the-World Movies Ever Made

    %Slideshow-366085% Zombie hordes. Vampires. Tripods. These are just some of the ways the world will end on the big screen.

    Hollywood loves to wipe out all life as we know it with increasingly inventive, and terrifying, ways. “Viral” is the latest movie to raise the threat level to extinction worthy. In honor of “Viral’s” upcoming release, here are ten truly unsettling end-of-the-world films guaranteed to give you all the nightmares.