28 Days Later
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 27 June 2003
Mash-up
Restless,
irksome, strange: there's not much downtime in Danny Boyle's 28
Days Later. From the film's first moments, when a crew of
ski-masked, PETA-style activists break into a London lab to save
test animals, the camera is in motion, the cuts convulsive, the
shadows ragged. One chimp is strapped to a chair, forced to watch
terrible human violence, like Alec in A Clockwork Orange. As
the wannabe rescuers approach the chimps' cages, a lab-coated
doctor-type tries to stop them. The chimps, he blurts, are
"infected." With what, asks one girl, prone to tears at
the sight of abused creatures. Comes the ominous, shaky-voiced
answer: "Rage." And with that, the teary girl unlocks the
cage and the chimp leaps at her, sputtering furiously, ripping at
her face as she screams.
Twenty-eight
days later... reads the intertitle, and bicycle courier Jim (Cillian
Murphy) is waking up in a hospital room. Ripping the tubes from his
arms, he staggers down the hallway to find the place deserted, the
ookiness boosted by Anthony Dod Mantle's grainy-digital, frankly and
superbly hard-to-read videowork. Jim can only remember that he was
in an accident on his bike, but can't even guess what's going on
now. And no one's around to tell him, just abandoned vehicles and
paper-strewn streets, as if he's Burgess Meredith wandering about in
The Twilight Zone.
Following
his accident, Jim has a wacky hair-buzz and a dazed look that
reflects his surroundings. Jim picks up wads of money, not realizing
yet how worthless it will be. Wandering the streets, he looks out
from Waterloo Bridge, picks up a weeks-old newspaper with a headline
reading, "EVACUATION," and stumbles on a notice board at
Piccadilly Circus: photos, scraps of paper, desperate pleas for help
in finding missing people (shot before 9-11 and edited during the
aftermath and amid anthrax anxieties, the image eerily evokes NYC's
memorials and notice boards).
As
Jim eventually discovers -- when he's discovered by a pair of
survivors, Selena (Naomie Harris) and Mark (Noah Huntley) -- Britain
has been decimated by the rage virus, passed on by saliva, blood,
and other bodily fluids. Once stricken, the victim has only a few
seconds before he or she turns into the most spastic of zombies,
filmed and edited to resemble some speed freakish nightmare, all
flailing limbs and staccato movements. It's Night of the Living
Dead on crack.
Indeed,
28 Days Later, directed by Boyle, written by Alex Garland and
produced by Andrew MacDonald (the same team who made The Beach
and are as happy to forget it as you are), is upfront about its
inspirations (think also of Romero's The Crazies, John
Wyndham's The Day of the Triffids, Geoff Murphy's The
Quiet Earth, Thom Eberhardt's Night of the Comet, even
the video-game-based Resident Evil), not to mention every
real-life viral scare ever, from polio or syphilis to AIDS or SARS
(this last, of course, a reference after the fact). Its maniacal
mash-up sensibility extends to plot, which lurches from moment to
moment and mood to mood. Bad (don't-go-in-there!) ideas are obvious:
Jim's insistence on seeing his certainly dead parents leads to brief
nostalgic misery, shocking violence (zombies coming through the
windows and walls like they're reenacting Romero's movies), and
lasting disaster.
At
the same time, seeming good ideas don't really hold up either.
Following some unsettling run-ins with roving, hyperkinetic
infecteds, Jim and Selena meet a warmly welcoming cab driver, Frank
(Brendan Gleeson), and his teenaged daughter Hannah (Megan Burns).
The tender father-daughter dynamic differs crucially from Jim and
Selena's flintier affinity; this at Selena's behest, as she knows
you have to be able to kill an infected, no matter who it is, at a
moment's notice (her own capacity for such violence is brutally
demonstrated, a useful lesson for gentle Jim). Selena's worry that
the family will only slow them down speaks to the film's basic
quandary: is it necessary to lose traditionally "human"
compassion, to match the infected's ferocity, in order to combat
them?
With
this structuring dilemma, it's no surprise that the gentlest
characters -- Jim and Frank -- undergo the most drastic
transformations. Indeed, the dilemma comes to a climax when the
newly formed band leave the city in search of a "safe
haven" outside Manchester, announced by a weeks-old radio
recording. En route, they find a supermarket, where they indulge
their hungers -- for cakes and tinned delicacies -- suggesting that
humanity, for now, has a certain weakness for consuming treats, and
not just from vending machines.
The
haven turns out to be a military outpost commanded by one Major
Henry West (Christopher Eccleston). The soldiers are ensconced in an
abandoned mansion "in the country" (such that the dangers
of infected assaults change shape -- in the city, they resemble
gangs, so awful that rats run from them; out here, they're like
marauding animals, and the soldiers appear to have designed a system
-- lights, landmines, heavy artillery -- with which to keep them at
bay.
Proud
of his domain and looking to protect it at all costs, West shows off
his cook's talents with eggs, his men's discipline and loyalty, and
most sensationally, his "experiment." This is an infected
black soldier they were able to sedate long enough to chain up, now
wide awake and bleeding from his eyes, snarling and speed-heaving
against his constraints (think: frantic chimpanzee in a cage). West
explains that he hopes to observe his development, to gauge how long
it takes him to starve to death, as if the other zombies will ever
run out of bodies to consume.
Here
the film lays out another interest, less clearly worked-out than its
obvious attention to viruses and horror movie conventions. With this
chained zombie-soldier, 28 Days Later takes up the ways that
race frames the very concept of infection, as this has shaped racism
for hundreds of years -- fears of otherness, contagion,
miscegenation. Selena's blackness alongside everyone else's
whiteness initially seems a non-issue, as the more significant
difference is eruptive and horrific, the infected's transmutation
into a non-human race. The appearance of this black soldier,
however, potentially (and however unintentionally) redraws
distinctions and raises difficult questions, recalling the effects
of Ben's (Duane Jones) blackness in Night of the Living Dead
(as this and the lynch mobbish sheriff's posse drew attention to
racism and Civil Rights activism in 1968).
Here
the effects are shifted, in part because times have changed, and in
part because they have not (Ben's dicey dealing with an hysterical
white woman, Barbara [Judith Odea] is still more anxiety-making than
Jim's relationship with Selena). Selena and Jim each undergo
specific transformations in 28 Days Later. At first, she
distrusts him out of hand -- no ties for this machete-wielding
warrior woman, as she knows she needs to be able to kill anyone
who's infected within seconds. Still, he grows on her, as he must in
a genre picture: on seeing that he's changed (able to kill), she
asks, "Do you want
us to find a cure and save the world or just fall in love and
fuck?" Now, these may not be so opposed as options as they
seem, but her point is plain. Are Jim's goals global or immediate,
like every other guy she's ever known?
Eventually,
Selena changes from tough, smart action girl to distressed, if
angry, damsel (granted, this is overstated visually, as she's forced
to don a gown as she anticipates her own gang-rape). And Jim becomes
a vicious killer, as ready to exact ugly survivalist vengeance as
any conditioned and ultimately desperate soldier boy. Both these
trajectories are complicated and inexact, adhering to genre
conventions but also strained and subversive. While the virus
metaphor is obviously timely, the characters' seeming capacity to
forget these nasty changes in themselves by film's end may be the
film's most unsettling point. |
Directed
by:
Danny Boyle
Starring:
Cillian Murphy
Naomie Harris
Megan Burns
Christopher Eccleston
Brendan Gleeson
Written
by:
Alex Garland
Rated:
R - Restricted
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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