Friday, October 5, 2012

Night 5 of the Attack of the 31 Nights of Halloween

Welcome to night 5 of the second annual Attack of the 31 Nights of Halloween. Make sure to stop by our Giveaway Post and enter to win a goodie bag full of frightfully good treats from 12 different shops! Tonight we have the next movie review off our Halloween Movie List. Follow along for an extra 25 entries in the giveaway. But first lets get to our featured item of the night from Laughing Vixen Lounge.


Ultimate Zombie Charm Bracelet  $65



Purchase any item(s) from Laughing Vixen Lounge through October 31st and get 10% off your order. Use code OTOBER10 at checkout.


Attack of the 31 Nights of Halloween Movie List.
Follow along with us for a month full of classic and fun spooky movies. Each night there will be a movie review of the next movie on our Halloween Movie List. Leave a comment on each post with your opinion of that movie. On the last day you will find the magic phrase you will use to unlock the entry worth 25 entries in the giveaway. You must comment on each post.


Night 5 - 28 Days Later




Tagline - The Days Are Numbered
              Be Thankful For Everything, For Soon There Will Be Nothing...


Directed by Danny Boyle (Shallow Grave, Trainspotting and A Life Less Ordinary) and released on June 27, 2003 by Twentieth Century Fox (Rated R). A monkey is set free from a lab. Bad move. The monkey sets off a chain reaction of a very nasty virus. 28 days later Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up in a hospital from a head injury having no idea what has happened around him. We follow Jim and a few other survivors on their journey through England and it's population of Zombie-like infected. Is there hope for the survivors? Is the whole world gone? Are there others left besides them?
When I decided to go see this movie in the theater I figured it would just be another post apocalyptic zombie movie. I was wrong. This movie was brilliant and truly frightening. Coming out in the post 911 world with everyone fearing everything this movie worked great. I mean, with chemical warfare and such, this movie didn't seem all that far fetched. So instead of another tired horror film I found myself sitting in the dark glued to the screen and leaving a bit freaked out. If you haven't seen this you should give it a try. Be warned it is a wee bit on the disgusting side.
The scene with Jim walking around London with no other people and no sound is a very eerie and impressive sight.

Take a look at the original trailer


Some trivia about the movie
1. The decision to film on DV (using Canon XL1 cameras) was both an aesthetic and a logistic choice. On the aesthetic side of things, Danny Boyle felt that the harshness of the DV imagery suited the post-apocalyptic urban landscape and the grittiness of the film in general. In the production notes of the movie, Boyle points out that "the general idea was to try and shoot as though we were survivors too," and as such, a pristine 35mm widescreen image would have been antithetical to this notion. In terms of logistics, producer Andrew Macdonald claims that it would have been impossible to shoot the film on anything other than DV, especially some of the exterior scenes in London. As MacDonald points out in the production notes, "The police and the local authorities were quite happy to assist us because we could set up scenes so quickly. We could literally be ready to shoot with a six-camera set-up within minutes - something we would not realistically have been able to do if shooting under the restrictions of 35mm which takes a good deal more time to set up a single shot."
2. Scriptwriter Alex Garland acknowledges several sources as inspiration for his screenplay, notably John Wyndham's The Day of the Triffids (1962), George A. Romero's "Dead" trilogy (Night, Dawn and Day) and The Omega Man (1971). Direct homages include Jim waking up in the hospital from The Day of the Triffids (1962), the chained infected being studied from Day of the Dead (1985), and the scene in the grocery store (people in the mall from Dawn of the Dead (1978)), the stop for supplies that saw a run-in with infected children (also Dawn of the Dead (1978)), and the military holing up against the plague with outsiders partially to deliberately include females (also Day of the Dead).
3. The symbol used for this film is the international symbol for blood-borne bio hazard.
4. The primary idea behind Rage was that every generation gets the zombies it deserves, and Alex Garland and Danny Boyle felt that the notion of the living dead wanting to eat peoples' brains was outdated. One of the original impetuses behind zombie movies was a fear of nuclear power and the possible ramifications it might have on humanity. As such, Garland and Boyle looked at what this generation is afraid of, and concluded that one of the biggest fears in modern society is a fear of diseases, a fear of a viral apocalypse, such as Ebola or Marburg. Indeed, Garland and Boyle were specifically inspired by such incidents as the recent anthrax and bio terrorism scares in London as well as the recent spread of mad cow disease and foot-and-mouth disease in the UK. As such, they decided to base their zombies on this fear of viruses.

17 comments:

  1. I must admit I've not seen this one...I just never jumped on the zombie bandwagon, but I've heard I should make an exception for this one. It's supposed to be one of the best scare movies ever, zombies or not, and Danny Boyle is always a brilliant director! Thanks for the review. I just might grit my teeth and do zombie film night. ;)

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  2. I liked this movie. I think the thought that went behind the premise worked to make this a much more chilling than horrifying movie.

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  3. Seriously--creeped me out..I mean what if this really happens?????
    Okay now I'm freaking out....buahahaha

    kristinaparmenter51(at)gmail(dot)com

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  4. I've never been much into zombies, but they're different in this movie. Certainly not traditional. Which pulled me in. It's a good one.

    secdoover@gmail.com

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  5. one of the best zombie films ever, I absolutely loved it

    DESPINA
    deb_oro@yahoo.gr

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  6. Great film, fantastic atmosphere and suspense

    Joanna-Gloria, yana_ven@yahoo.gr

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  7. I've always loved movies based around things that could actually happen in real life, and this movie sounds awesome. I hope to see it one day! :)

    -Rachael Henzman

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  8. The Rage Virus is so plausible THAT is scarey!

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  9. I love Zombie movies and I think that 28 Days Later is the best zombie movie. I like Cillian Murphy as actor too.
    Artemis

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  10. Haven't seen it, but it sounds pretty creepy...

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  11. I've been a huge fan of Zombie movies since Night of the Living Dead (and old zombie movies on the late show). This one had some good scares but since it is a modern Zombie movie the attraction is mainly the special effects, which are quite good.

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  12. sheila musselman askinsOctober 8, 2012 at 6:26 PM

    i LOVE this movie..serious creep factor..and you keep thinking...could this really happen?!? one of the best zombie movies!

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  13. I thought this was an amazing fresh take on a zombie flick...Though personally I didnt love the ending

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  14. I liked this movie...was a pretty good zombie movie...

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  15. This movie is great and I love zombie movies. The whole all alone, not a person around...trying to figure out how to survive such extreme conditions is always a great story. This movie is definitely worth watching if you are a zombie fan.

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  16. Never saw this one...maybe because I'm not a reaaly fan of zombie movies...

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