Documentary about the making of Danny Boyle's end-of-the-world style horror movie, 28 Days Later.Documentary about the making of Danny Boyle's end-of-the-world style horror movie, 28 Days Later.Documentary about the making of Danny Boyle's end-of-the-world style horror movie, 28 Days Later.
Photos
Lisa I'Anson
- Narrator
- (voice)
Marvin Campbell
- Self
- (uncredited)
Junior Laniyan
- Self
- (uncredited)
Ray Panthaki
- Self
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis featurette is featured on the 28 Days Later (2002) DVD, released in 2003.
- ConnectionsFeatures 28 Days Later (2002)
Featured review
More a long trailer than a good `making of' documentary
To coincide with the UK release of 28 Days Later this documentary looks at the reality behind the film, using mad cow disease as an example. The second half of the film looks the writing of the film, the cast and behind the scenes of making the film.
I taped this hoping that this documentary would be the quality you can find on a good DVD rather than an advert style programme. However this manages to fall between these two stools and be good if not quite as good as you'd hope it would be. The first half is interesting with experts saying how real a rapid viral infection could be, even if it uses BSE as an example. I still found it difficult to envisage the UK decimated by a virus and at times it felt they were talking it up not out of scientific interest but to sell the film.
The second half is a little more interesting because it looks at the cast and the process of making the film. It does tend to err a little on the side of patting each other on the back for a job well done but it is interesting at points. The film looks at how they made London appear deserted as well as the boot camp used to train the soldiers, but not in very much detail. It's a shame because no real good stories come out of it and it never manages to be insightful or any more interesting than the promotional interviews that the cast all have to do anyway.
Overall I was pretty let down by this. It was made by the filmmakers themselves and I hoped more effort would have been put in. For 20 odd minutes it is still worth a watch once but to be honest it is as much a fancy trailer as it is a documentary.
I taped this hoping that this documentary would be the quality you can find on a good DVD rather than an advert style programme. However this manages to fall between these two stools and be good if not quite as good as you'd hope it would be. The first half is interesting with experts saying how real a rapid viral infection could be, even if it uses BSE as an example. I still found it difficult to envisage the UK decimated by a virus and at times it felt they were talking it up not out of scientific interest but to sell the film.
The second half is a little more interesting because it looks at the cast and the process of making the film. It does tend to err a little on the side of patting each other on the back for a job well done but it is interesting at points. The film looks at how they made London appear deserted as well as the boot camp used to train the soldiers, but not in very much detail. It's a shame because no real good stories come out of it and it never manages to be insightful or any more interesting than the promotional interviews that the cast all have to do anyway.
Overall I was pretty let down by this. It was made by the filmmakers themselves and I hoped more effort would have been put in. For 20 odd minutes it is still worth a watch once but to be honest it is as much a fancy trailer as it is a documentary.
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- bob the moo
- Nov 17, 2002
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Top Gap
By what name was Pure Rage: The Making of '28 Days Later' (2002) officially released in Canada in English?
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