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| DVD - Full Frame / PAN & SCAN / Dubbed / Subtitled / DOLBY | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
Closed Caption; Audio commentary by director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland; Three alternate endings; Deleted scenes with optional commentary; "Pure Rage: The Making of 28 Days Later" featurette; Jacknife Lee music video; Animated storyboards; Still photo galleries; Theatrical trailer
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Rage
2. 28 Days Later...
3. The Infected
4. The Plague
5. Mum & Dad
6. The Neighbor
7. The Only Way
8. The Guardian
9. Frank and Hannah
10. The Answer to Infection
11. To Manchester
12. In Death's Path
13. Shopping
14. Young and Infected
15. Picnic
16. Valium
17. A Bad Dream
18. The Blockade
19. A Fatal Drop
20. Sanctuary
21. The Answer's Here
22. Dinner
23. Under Attack
24. West's Promise
25. The Executioners
26. A Little More Presentable
27. The Hunted
28. The Infection Within
29. Serena's Savior
30. The Last Soldier
31. Survivors
32. End Titles
Just when it seemed zombie movies had been done to death, a stylish, intelligent jolt from director Danny Boyle springs the sub-genre back to life. 28 Days Later, based on Alex Garland's novel, employs the allegorical underpinnings of all the best zombie shockers. After an opening scene in which some misguided animal rights activists spring a dangerously infected primate from his lab cage, Boyle jumps four weeks ahead. A London bike messenger named Jim (Cillian Murphy) awakes from a coma to discover the city is virtually deserted, and he soon joins a few other survivors in a desperate fight against the "infected" -- people overtaken with a contagious, uncontrollable rage defined only by an imperative to infect. With due homage to George Romero's zombie classics, Boyle chooses to re-imagine rather than reinvent the genre: The infected, for instance, move with furious speed -- in stark contrast to Romero's lumbering undead. Inevitably, the story boils down to the genre's essential Darwinian mechanics, pitting the humane, thoughtful, and victimized against not only the infected but also the tough guys with big guns. Produced in the shadow of September 11, 2001 and released at the height of the world's SARS worries, the film inadvertently became very much a movie of its moment. Nonetheless, with its thoughtful perspective, gorgeous digital cinematography by Anthony Dod Mantle, and effective genre trappings, 28 Days Later should stand the test of time. That is, it's so good it won't die. Tony Nigro, Barnes & Noble
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