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28 Days Later, Danny Boyle’s Lament or The Living Dead

Rating: ***

It’s not easy to like  Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later series, unless  you choose to be patient. If you do , the  latest in the series is rewarding  in unexpected ways. The  characters are memorable  when they choose to be.

   My favourite is  not the  child protagonist  Spike(Alfie Williams) , though he  is a prized find,  no doubt. But the best funniest lines in this frequently tedious but  sporadically brilliant apocalyptic  zombie  film is  a Swedish character named Erik  who comes   in the  second-half equipped  with quips .

   Erik, played by  the Swedish actor Edvin Ryding,  who is the comic relief  in this  meditative  monster movie  with flesh eating zombies who  crawl  all over the  scenic Scottish hinterland, gets a  closure he doesn’t deserve..

It is  a strange  and piercing dichotomy: the  panoramic landscape—shot by cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle  as  though there is no  tomorrow– and  the acute violence of  an annihilated  civilization with  nothing remaining , not even any  shred  of hope.

Danny Boyle,whom we  know  and partially love for putting Mumbai’s slums on the  world map, is here  in  complete control of his characters, although not so  much their travel plans. The plot tends to go haywire at times, juggling between the  jugular and the bizarre, with many  episodes  in the storytelling  spiralling  out of sync with the complete picture.

 But  the main plot  of a virus  infecting civilization on the mainland  and  a family coming apart on an island  away from the mainland, is  injected with  substantial sagacity  and warmth. In the first-half, Spike is accompanied by his  father Jamie(Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to the  infected mainland  to  initiate the  boy  into the  deadly danger that  awaits them.

   This half is  unremarkable even when the jumpstarts grab your attention.

 It’s the second-half  that  comes alive  with a  spluttering and splattering wave  of  bloodied  violence as  Spike takes his  ailing mother   across  from the safety of the secluded island to the queer  ghoulishness  of the  mayhem maddened mainland. It is here that the  film’s ‘skull’-ful  portrait of  Nature’s barbaric  caprice unfolds with significant savagery and sensitivity.

 Danny Boyle  spares  us none of  the  violence of  a wounded  civilization. And yet there is a discernible  gentleness in the heartwarming  images of  a young son  parenting his own  mother Isla(Jodie Comer, tactile , touching and  terrific), taking her  to meet  the only surviving doctor Kelson(a very fine  Ralph Fiennes) who spends his  time suspended from civilization  in the  quest  of  constructing a pyramid of skulls of those who  perished  by infection and inflexion.

  The  metaphor of  the skulls  as  a manifestation  of the violence  that has grips  Danny Boyle’s universe ,is   acutely  tragic and  expressive. There are  times  towards the  end when the mother-son equation  erases  the excesses  of tormenting turpitude that flash across the screen in  whimsical  whiplashes  of wickedness.

  The storytelling is torn between the  trauma  of  living in the  torment  of  today and the beauty of  the past.28 Days Later is all  heart, some of it ripped  off and on display right in  front of our nauseous selves.

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