|
Donato Totaro , donato@offscreen.com
June 30, 2003
|
Sometimes it is a fine
line between homage and imitation. With the plentiful allusions to George
Romero’s classic zombie trilogy (Night of the Living Dead, 1968, Dawn
of the Dead, 1979, and Day of the Dead, 1985) the line is perilously
treaded in Danny Boyle’s latest pseudo zombie, science-fiction action thriller
28 Days Later. The
The film opens in a science laboratory where we see several chimpanzees in cages. Three armed and aggressive animal activists enter the laboratory to set the animals free, against the repeated frantic warnings of a scientist. An activist opens a cage and a manic chimpanzee jumps out and attacks her, setting off the fatal virus. The image fades to black, foreboding intertitle which reads “28 days later.” The fact that the activists take no heed whatsoever of what the scientist was saying, or his state of panic, says something about human nature which shapes the film’s central thematic: humans are dangerous and single-minded in their personal drives regardless of whether they are ‘infected’ or ‘healthy.’ And as the film progresses, we come to learn that each adult character in the film is driven in a similar, single-minded, and in some cases selfish, manner. The narrative proper begins
after the title card. A young man, Jim (Cillian Murphy), wakes up from a coma
inflicted, we later learn, from an injury sustained in a bicycle accident.
To his confusion, the hospital is empty and in a disheveled state. He is
met with a similar scenario as he walks through a desolate London. The Rip Van Winkle-like
character soon learns of the virus that has separated London into the ragingly mad
and violent infected and the few remaining humans trying to stay one step
ahead of the infected. Jim is ambushed by an infected ‘zombie’ but saved by
a black woman, Selena (Naomie Harris), and a young man, Mark (Noah Huntley),
who becomes infected in the rescue mission. In this scene we learn that once
infected, a human has all but about 20 seconds before they turn rabid. Selena
takes the appropriate action and machete’s Mark to death before he can turn
on them. When the shocked Jim asks Selena how she could have been so sure
that he was infected, she replies, “I didn’t, but I could see in his eyes
that he knew” (quote is paraphrased). Survival lesson number one for Jim.
They meet up with two other humans living in a high-rise apartment, a middle-aged
man named Frank (Brendan Gleeson) and his teenager daughter Hannah (Megan
Burns). The group hears a pre-recorded radio message from the military of
a safety zone in North Manchester where the military claim
to have the ‘solution to the virus.’ From this point on the film becomes a
road movie with the surrogate family bonding as they test their survival skills
(and have some fun) on route to the military camp. Once there the film moves
toward its central plot twist (MAJOR SPOILER): the message was a ploy by the
military to get women into their compound so they can begin the repopulation
of I was not surprised when I read that Boyle does not consider his film a horror film. It is another case of the flexibility and double-edged nature of genre: the marketing team is clearly pushing this as a horror film, while the director has made a hybrid film, part zombie film, part virus film (The Crazies, George Romero,1973, Shivers, David Cronenberg, 1975, Blue Sunshine, Jeff Lieberman, 1977, Virus, Kinji Fukasaku, 1980, Outbreak, Wolfgang Petersen, 1995), and part last-human-on-earth film (The World, the Flesh and the Devil, Ranald MacDougall, 1959, The Last Man on Earth, Sidney Salkow, 1964, The Omega Man, Boris Sagal, 1971). All of these elements have already, of course, been worked together across the filmography of George Romero, namely through The Crazies and his zombie trilogy, not to mention the psychotic chimpanzee from Monkey Shines. But it is best not to compare this to Romero, since the latter’s work is head and shoulders above what Boyle has done here. In a recent interview Romero had this to say, “Nobody would presume to go out and make a comedy but everybody out there thinks they know how to make a horror film” (Rue Morgue, July/August 2003, p. 20). Given the deft handling of suspense in Shallow Grave, I would not go so far as saying that this is a case of a director being wholly out of their element, but clearly Boyle did not feel comfortable working within the confines and tradition of the horror film, or simply was not interested in such an approach (and I’m not buying the postmodern, pastiche theory cop-out). As a strategy, this may make a film more successful at the box-office, but not without consequences. The most damning, for a film with pretenses of horror, is that it does not maintain a level of fear associated with horror. The moments of horror are treated more as an intervention into the proceedings rather than an element which grows slowly out of the dread and misery of the situation. Stylistically the film works against horror film aesthetics. Most of the ‘zombie’ attacks occur too quickly, without a proper build-up, and without any lingering moments after the attacks. Gore and the gross-out scenes may not be a pre-requisite of the horror film, but it sure helps up the ante, especially when nothing else works. The attacks occur so fast and are edited so quickly that we never even get to see what the infected humans do to their victims! And when not being fragmented with rapid fire edits, the infected are shot with a step printed stuttering camera movement that has become an annoyingly overused visual effect in recent horror films. Even the wonderful mood in the opening scene of Jim walking through an empty London cityscape is marred by an overbearing rock soundtrack that builds to a chaotic crescendo. Apparently the film was shot on digital video for both aesthetic (grittier) and economic reasons. However, the film’s style leads me to believe the latter is the real reason, because if the notion of a gritty, realistic style was so important to Boyle he would not have subverted this design with overbearing music and gimmicky visual effects. I am not saying that a horror film has to go for the jugular full-throttle. A horror film can often benefit from a reprieve, and in fact my favorite moment in 28 Days Later is not one of the “horror” scenes but the quiet picnic scene by the river where the surrogate ‘family’ cements the bonding process. The (Tarkovskian?) image of the horses galloping next to the lake, beautifully underscored by Brian Eno’s transcendent track “The Ascent,” renders a powerful sense of nature in harmony that contrasts with the human made chaos and strikes an environmental political chord. Therefore horror, fear, and dread need not dominate every moment in a horror film, but it must be the driving force, and it clearly isn’t in 28 Days Later. Even among those who enjoy
the film, there is a consensus that the ending is flawed, mainly because of
the dramatic shift in tone from the intense action of the military scenes
to the final scene of the three survivors, Jim, Selena, and Hannah, living
in Swiss Family Robinson-like harmony, not seeming too worried about whether
or not the overhead jet has seen their huge “Hello” sign. Frankly, aside from
the noted shortcomings in terms of pure fright, the film has problems long
before the ending with its many unanswered questions: if London is in total anarchy, where
are all the bodies in the opening scenes of Jim walking through London? Yes later we do see neat
piles of dead bodies along the side of the road, but it seems unlikely that
such order would continue given the state of anarchy. Major West’s conspiracy
theory of a world-wide quarantine on Although the film loses some of its tightness and focus once they arrive at the military base, this part of the scenario does offer some social-political reverberation. The film begins with some harrowing actual newsreel footage of recent war atrocities, which subtly sets up the representation of the fictional military long before we see them. Within the context of the newsreel footage (and recent military history), the attempted rape by the soldiers of Hannah and Selena can be seen as a not-so-veiled reference to the Bosnian War crimes of 1992, which recently saw three soldiers convicted by an International Criminal Tribunal for the rape of several Muslim women. Even though its faults outweigh its strengths, I would recommend 28 Days Later to horror fans. Evidently the surprise box-office success of 28 Days Later has helped George Romero finally put together the finances for a fourth film in his zombie installment, tentatively titled Dead Reckoning. If this ends up being true, for this alone I’d give my blessings to 28 Days Later! |