28 Days Later Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

74 =
Based upon 15 Critic Reviews
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Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

A damn-near great end-of-the-world zombie movie, terrifying on the basic heebie-jeebie level, respectful toward its B-movie forebears, and all the more unnerving for coming out in this fretful era of SARS and germ warfare.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

A tough, smart, ingenious movie that leads its characters into situations where everything depends on their (and our) understanding of human nature.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Owen GleibermanAdd Critic to Favorites

A swankily austere piece of jeepers-creepers sci-fi. Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Manohla DargisAdd Critic to Favorites

At once an old-fashioned freakout and an environmental cautionary tale (mess with Mother Nature and she'll mess with you right back), the film combines two genre standbys -- lethal contagion and the undead -- and gives them a wicked, contemporary spin.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

Solid performances, an intelligent script, and sure-handed direction. The result is a movie that kept me involved from start to finish. Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland plumb the violence of the mind with slashing wit and shocking gravity. Happy nightmares. Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Mick LaSalleAdd Critic to Favorites

By the finish, the movie is getting by on little but adrenaline and audience goodwill. Still, that goodwill runs fairly deep, because, taken all in all, 28 Days Later is a superior motion picture.Read the full review

Slate | David EdelsteinAdd Critic to Favorites

This is finally the zombie flick as cautionary political tale, and as humanist parable. It's not the flesh-gouging zombie we have to worry about, the filmmakers suggest, but the soul-gouging zombie within.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

Mr. Boyle has hardly lost his sly, provocative perversity or his ear for the rhythms of unchecked violence, but he does seem to be maturing. It's as if, in contemplating the annihilation of the human race, he has discovered his inner humanist.Read the full review

The Onion (A.V. Club) | Nathan RabinAdd Critic to Favorites

Like his makeshift societies, Garland's tantalizing set-ups tend to unravel in unsatisfying ways. Read the full review

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