28 Days Later: Screenplay
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Average customer review:Product Description
Alex ("The Beach") Garland's first screenplay is a terrifying page-turner brought vividly to the screen by director Danny ("Trainspotting") Boyle. A virus that locks those infected into a permanent state of killing rage is accidentally released from a British research facility. Twenty-eight days later, a motocycle messenger awakes from a coma and finds himself among a small group of survivors in London, trapped in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. As they attempt to salvage a future from the apocalypse, they find that their most deadly enemy may not be the virus, but other survivors.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #105275 in Books
- Published on: 2002-10-07
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 96 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
Screenplay of the visceral new film from the team of Danny Boyle, Alex Garland and Andrew Macdonald as they follow The Beach with a no-stars cast, digital video shot, UK-set urban zombie horror film. The publication of the screenplay coincides with a UK wide tour of special screenings. The film will be released on 1 November.
About the Author
Alex Garland's first screenplay is a terrifying page-turner brought vividly to the screen by director Danny Boyle.
Customer Reviews
Rage, rage through the dying of the light
It's 11.30pm on a Friday night, my mate and I are supposed to be going to a club but after about 10 missed calls it's apparent the group of guys we're trying to meet up with have lost signal on their mobiles because they've gone into the club before us. Our last train is at 12 from Liverpool Street, and being in the mood to go out we jump in a taxi and head towards Leicester Square. Try the mobile again - still no reply... so what do we do? Clubbing or cinema, being knackered after the day we meander into the Odeon. OK, Harry Potter or 28 Days Later? We pays the money and makes the choice - 28 days looks like a laugh... So we're sitting there with popcorn and generally larking about (we're still a bit drunk from the pub)...
BANG! This film was a wake-up call. We sat there until 2.30am sobering up very very fast. Empire magazine called it the "best British horror movie for 30 years", it has Alex Garland (author "The Beach"), and Danny Boyle (director of "Trainspotting") behind the scenes. The film was funded by the lottery and was done on a budget of just over £3m, but it doesn't feel like shortcuts were made, but that the message was in the medium - it was very hard hitting. An example of this is that Boyle and his crew did not have official permission to shoot in London, so instead they filmed in the early hours and relied on keeping drivers and passers-by out of shot, which in itself, is a fantastic achievement. The light at dawn and the absence of life generates a sense of immediacy, and a dream-like reality that makes scenes like the "missing persons" boards around the statue of Eros in Piccadilly both eerie and disturbing.
Our hero wakes up to grim and dirty London. Buses are overturned. The tubes have stopped. The shops are deserted and the fruit is rotting. London is dead. London is a graveyard. We learn that animal rights activists have unwittingly released a "rage" virus from a laboratory. Madness has descended on England. Your family and loved ones have either been torn apart by the infected or become the infected. These subhuman creatures are fast, they're angry and they will stop at nothing before they kill you. As Larkin said: "they f*** you up, your mum and dad". That's the chilling blow which really hits home. The infected killer is no longer anonymous, 20 seconds ago it was your dad.
Welcome to a world where hunting packs of the infected run screaming through the night. Even if they get hit and engulfed in flames from a Molotov cocktail they still keep coming until they die. This is a zombie movie for the playstation generation. They run fast, they think fast, and in the scene where one is chained up you can see the dark depths of this illness - they are just like you or I, but they have become bloodthirsty killers at the cost of everything we hold sacred.
The survivors claw their way onwards with tooth and nail, but what is there to live for? The group escape London and decide to drive to Manchester in a black cab towards a radio signal from an Army unit... Now I have to admit, there are few original plot moves with this, and there are no "new" ideas - social paranoia, civic breakdown, viral contamination have all been covered. For me, the redeeming feature that emerged through the blood and fear was this question of survival. This is what sets this story apart, for it also has a delicate touch. The survivors must reconcile their loss, and life must go on.
So there, we have it... at 2.30am on a Saturday morning my mate and I had a long walk from Leicester Square to Liverpool Street in December 2002 through the mists and eerily lit churches and deserted streets. I have to admit, the first time a tramp coughed from a shadowed doorstep, I was ready to run! (For those who choose this interesting experience, the only all-night coffee shop is Ponti's on Bishopsgate). A strange night, a compelling and powerful film - it drove me to read this and, of course, the book is always better!!
I highly recommend that you go see the movie and then read this book. It is a frightening, intelligent apocalypse for modern Britain.
28 Days Later
This book should only be read after watching the film - but having done that it was like re-living the film all over again. Wasn't expecting a script book, but even then it was all so real, just like the film - i found myself jumping at the book like i did at the film!
Great film and book - a must have!
EXCELLENT........ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OUT TODAY
A virus that locks those infected into a permanent state of killing rage, is accidentally released from a British research facility. Carried by animals and humans, the virus is impossible to contain, and spreads across the entire planet. Twenty-eight days later, a small group of survivors are trapped in London, caught in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. As they attempt to salvage a future from the apocalypse, they find that their most deadly enemy is not the virus, but other survivors. This book was excellent to read, its a cross between resident evil and the last train ( an ITV series a few years back)...you have to read this book

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