惊变28年 的演职人员

惊变28年

In 28 days it began. In 28 weeks it spread. In 28 years it evolved.

距离 rage 病毒从生物武器实验室泄漏已过去 28 年,如今这片土地仍处于残酷的封锁隔离中,但有些人已在感染者盘踞的世界里找到了生存之道。其中一支队伍栖息在一座小岛上,仅有一条重兵把守的堤道与大陆相连。当一名成员奉命深入大陆腹地执行任务时,他发现了诸多秘密、奇观与骇人真相 —— 病毒不仅使感染者发生变异,也改变了其他幸存者的生存形态。

Critics' Reviews

90
Danny Boyle’s “28 Years Later,” a zombified IP, returns the director to the gory terrain he first forged with the grungy “28 Days Later.” It also sees him reteaming with Alex Garland, who after launching a successful directorial career (“Annihilation”) is back penning a franchise he authored as screenwriter for “28 Days Later.” That’s nearly where the nostalgia ends. Because whatever you think the third edition in this trilogy could be, Boyle and Garland gleefully subvert it. Instead, “28 Years Later,” an at times tonally daring and whimsically transportive coming-of-age zombie film, does the exact opposite of what you expect. Though this horror flick anticipates the coming of the Nia DaCosta helmed sequel “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple,” it refreshingly doesn’t operate by the logic of franchise building. It’s a gnarly piece of gruesome art.
80
Boyle and Garland have much on their minds. 28 Years Later brims with thematic resonances, a canvas on which to illustrate a national identity-crisis. There is a clear Brexit analogy in a country experiencing isolationism — the rage-ravaged Britain secluded from the world; its people secluded from their own land. The distinctly British post-apocalyptic society is part Blitz-spirit wartime-rationing aesthetic, part medieval fortress — Boyle repeatedly cuts to black-and-white World War footage. Is this the nebulous ‘good old days’ that some Brits yearned for? Is survival inherently regressive? Years is also about the stories we tell ourselves, the myth-building that creates a nation, a fiction rather than truth.
38
I struggle with films that open with a priest kneeling between pews accepting the cannibalism of his zombie congregation while his little boy in hiding asks why “Da” has forsaken him. I get it. I got it. I’ve gotten the evangelical Christian aspect of zombies-as-metaphor since I saw Night of the Living Dead as a steadfastly average middle-American child, for Christ’s sake. (Literally.) There’s no point too subtle for Boyle, the poor man’s Ridley Scott (who was already the poor man’s Smart Filmmaker), to bloat into obscenity. He did, after all, give us Millions, which plays more as a prequel to this film than 28 Days Later does, come to think of it. Consider Swedish soldier Erik (Edvin Ryding), who serves no function as a human being but fulfils several functions as a symbol. He says he wanted to be thought of as a “man,” so he joined the Navy and promptly shipwrecked on Scotland. Then he says the hyper-macho “Alpha” zombies of 28 Years Later are like “stock brokers, fuckin’ Wall Street guys.” Get it? Zombies not only represent the insidious creep of prosperity gospel Christians but also represent the insidious creep of…prosperity…gospel, um, Christians.

惊变28年 的完整演员阵容

Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Jamie

Aaron Taylor-Johnson

Jamie
Aaron Taylor-Johnson delivers a gripping performance as Jamie in the movie '28 Years Later', a character thrust into a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by the aftermath of a devastating viral outbreak. His portrayal is one of both vulnerability and resilience, capturing the essence of a young man who is at once out of his depth and yet forced to grow in the face of unimaginable horror. Taylor-Johnson's Jamie is a beacon of humanity in a desolate landscape, navigating the emotional complexities of survival, loss, and the will to protect those he loves. His transformation from an ordinary individual to a hardened survivor is both believable and emotionally resonant, grounding the film's high-stakes action in a deeply relatable character journey. With intense physicality and nuanced emotional depth, Taylor-Johnson's performance stands out as a highlight of the film, ensuring that Jamie's plight lingers in the audience's mind long after the credits roll.
Ralph Fiennes as Dr. Ian Kelson

Ralph Fiennes

Dr. Ian Kelson
In the movie "28 Weeks Later," Ralph Fiennes delivers a compelling performance as Dr. Brian Kelson, a military medical officer tasked with overseeing the repopulation of a post-apocalyptic London following the devastating rage virus outbreak depicted in "28 Days Later." Fiennes brings a sense of gravitas and complexity to the role, portraying Kelson as a man torn between his duty to protect public health and the ethical dilemmas that arise in the face of a fragile new society. His character is a pillar of calm amidst the chaos, yet Fiennes expertly reveals the cracks in Kelson's stoic facade, hinting at an underlying desperation to contain the situation at all costs. As the narrative unfolds, Fiennes skilfully navigates Kelson's moral decline, showcasing the character's descent from a well-intentioned doctor to a figure complicit in horrifying decisions, all while maintaining a veneer of professionalism. His performance adds a layers of humanity and moral ambiguity to the film's exploration of fear, power, and survival.
Emma Laird as Jimmima

Emma Laird

Jimmima

惊变28年 的制作团队

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