28 Weeks Later (2007)
/In a split second you make a choice. Sacrifice or Salvation. Don, holed up in a farmhouse with his wife and a few other survivors in the beginning of 28 WEEKS LATER, makes that choice when a group of people infected with the Rage Virus begin ripping apart the farmhouse. Torn between jumping out a window to freedom or staying to try and save his wife, Don jumps and, in what looks to be an act of self preservation turns into something a whole lot worse in this sequel to the popular 28 DAYS LATER.
For anyone who hasn't seen Danny Boyle's re-examination of the "zombie" picture, the universe of both DAYS and WEEKS concern the spread of something called the Rage Virus, a highly contagious disease that turns anyone coming into contact with it, either through the blood or saliva, into a raging fiend within 20 seconds - bloodthirsty and completely apeshit. 28 DAYS LATER tells one man's story as he wakes up from a coma 28 days after the outbreak to find his country falling apart. 28 WEEKS later follows the fate of one unlucky family as Britain attempts to rebuild and re-populate, only to suffer another outbreak.

Fellow Nerds and Geeks, you may commence your flaming.
In the 6 months since the initial outbreak, the American military has come over to assist Britain in the re-building process. A large section of London has been cleared and people are beginning to move back in. Don, reunited with his two children, tries to cope with his decision at the farmhouse, telling his children that he tried but was unable to save their mother. Don's children Tammy and Andy head outside the "Green Zone" in an effort to retrieve their belongings and mementos of their mother, only to find the real thing hiding out upstairs, somehow surviving the Infected attack. Upon being brought back to the protected zone, scientists discover she's immune to the infection, but still acts as a carrier. One repentant kiss later and Don finds out how quickly the virus can spread, and like that 28 WEEKS LATER takes off.
Everything is filmed in a gritty documentary style, and echoes of Iraq and a post 9/11 world reverberate throughout the story. After a terrifying and frantic opening, things begin to move at a more measured pace, and the real tension oftentimes comes not from impending Infected attacks, but from the military, whose "Code Red" focuses on extermination when containment fails. The danger comes from two directions at once: in one scene our main group locks themselves in a car not only to escape the Infected, but to seal themselves off from the chemical weapons being used by the Army to eradicate a menace they can no longer differentiate.


