Horror was by far the best movie genre of 2025, and this is in no small part due to the revival of franchises with resounding success, as was the case with 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple. Sequels are often uncreative endeavors for studios to capitalize on the nostalgia of viewers, but both Final Destination: Bloodlines and 28 Years Later are original and refreshing.
Even the 2026 Oscar nominations prove that the horror genre is having its moment now like never before, even though neither of the two franchise movies made it into the list of nominees. However, 28 Years Later, which saw Danny Boyle returning as director to the franchise, 23 years after the original movie’s release, officially reinvigorated interest in the franchise.
With stunning cinematography, emotionally rich storytelling, and new lore, 28 Years Later proved that thought and effort went into the franchise’s revival. As a major fan of the first film, I couldn’t be more pleased that its sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple does justice to the new world that Danny Boyle introduces viewers to in the previous film.
28 Years Later Changed The Rules Of The Rage Virus
One of the most significant details about the rage virus in the 28 Days Later franchise is that it causes the infected people to eventually die of starvation after experiencing excruciating pain for days. As long as they’re alive, they try to feed on human flesh to survive, but cannot sustain themselves on infected flesh. So, isolation eventually kills them.
The infected in the 28 Days Later franchise are thus also physically easy to overpower one-on-one because the virus eats at them from inside, and they’re always starving. However, 28 Days Later‘s starvation detail no longer matters as much after 28 Years Later, because the latter movie introduces the Alpha infected, who is physically much stronger and no longer starving.
While this mutation introduces a new dynamic to the lore about the rage virus, it also immediately undoes the most compelling arc from 28 Weeks Later, which is an underrated and often forgotten sequel. That movie set up a possible cure for the rage virus, but the Alpha renders it pointless, which is why 28 Years Later doesn’t mention it.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Humanizes The Alpha Infected
Nia DaCosta’s 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple finds a creative way to make the Alpha infected vulnerable again, despite them being physically impossible to overpower. Everyone infected by the rage virus is mostly just capable of violence, but Samson, the Alpha infected who is most prominently featured in The Bone Temple, shows emotions that are unprecedented for the infected.
Dr. Ian Kelson literally hangs out with Samson after injecting the latter with an opiate cocktail that makes him docile and even apparently capable of critical thought. Once the addiction developed, Samson no longer tried to hurt Kelson even after the drugs wore off after a session, and arcs like this is why The Bone Temple has such positive reviews.
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Revives The Antidote Arc
Alongside exploring his humanization and developing an arc of non-violence centered around Samson, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple also explores his ability to think while infected by the virus. There is even a point where Samson speaks while under the influence of the drugs, which deters Kelson from killing him as a means of mercifully ending his unending pain.
Every review of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple praises the movie’s balance of cynicism and optimism, established through the arcs of the human characters and the alpha infected, respectively. To this end, the film ends on the positive note of establishing, beyond a doubt, that Dr. Kelson has developed an actual cure for the mutated version of the virus.
The Bone Temple Is Also Not A Typical Zombie Movie
What makes Danny Boyle’s first 28 Days Later movie so revolutionary is its use of the premise of a virus outbreak, which looks like a zombie apocalypse at points, to explore truths about human nature. 28 Days Later is one of the most unique and scary zombie movies because the zombie apocalypse is simply a means of developing human characters.
Similarly, 28 Days Later: The Bone Temple explores human nature in the world of the zombie apocalypse. Zombie attacks aren’t the focus of the movie. A new sense of normalcy exists in the ravaged world, and the movie focuses on the violent instincts of a surviving cult of humans who terrorize the land no less than the infected roaming around.
Cillian Murphy’s Cameo Isn’t The Only 28 Days Later Callback
Samson’s arc of discovering his humanity and ultimately being cured, alongside the cult’s journey through the world, adds a familiar human touch to the movie that brings the franchise back to its roots. Moreover, a fan-favorite moment in the final scene of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple shows Cillian Murphy reprising his role as Jim from 28 Days Later.
The violent cult that beats up others, skins them alive, and kills in the name of satanism also feels like a reference to the military division in 28 Days Later. Both groups of characters help explore how evil instincts dominate in lawless worlds. The box office is bad news for the franchise due to these callbacks and the unanswered questions.
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