Information about 28 Days Later
| 28 Days Later | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Danny Boyle |
| Produced by | Andrew Macdonald |
| Written by | Alex Garland |
| Starring | Cillian Murphy Naomie Harris Brendan Gleeson Christopher Eccleston Megan Burns |
| Music by | John Murphy |
| Cinematography | Anthony Dod Mantle |
| Editing by | Chris Gill |
| Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
| Release date(s) | 1 November 2002 27 June 2003 |
| Running time | 113 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | £5,000,000 |
| Followed by | 28 Weeks Later |
| Official website | |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
28 Days Later is a 2002 British post-apocalyptic science fiction horror film directed by Danny Boyle and starring Cillian Murphy, Naomie Harris and Christopher Eccleston. Set in Great Britain, just after the turn of the 21st century, the story depicts the breakdown of society following the accidental release of a highly contagious virus known as "Rage" (which renders people mindlessly violent) and focuses upon the struggle of four survivors to cope with the ruination of the life they once knew.
A critical and commercial success, the film is widely recognized for images of a deserted London, and was shot almost entirely on digital video. The film spawned the 2007 sequel, 28 Weeks Later.
Plot
The film opens with British animal rights activists breaking into a science laboratory to free chimpanzees being used for medical research. The chimps, dosed with the "Rage virus", attack and infect the activists and a researcher.
Twenty-eight days later, a bicycle courier named Jim (Cillian Murphy) awakens from a coma in a deserted hospital. Upon leaving, he discovers that London has been completely abandoned and is rife with signs of catastrophe. After taking refuge in a church, Jim is chased by zombie-like people, but is rescued by two survivors, Selena (Naomie Harris) and Mark (Noah Huntley), who rush him to their hideout in the London Underground. They tell Jim that while he was comatose, a virus spread uncontrollably among the populace, turning most people into mindless, blood-spewing monsters (referred to as "the Infected") and resulting in societal collapse, possibly on a global scale.
Jim takes Selena and Mark to his parents' house, but they discover that his parents have committed suicide. That night, some of the Infected break in and attack the survivors. Upon realising that Mark has been bitten, Selena brutally hacks him to death with a machete. She explains to Jim that infection is spread through blood and takes only seconds to overwhelm its victims, rendering them deadly to others. She warns that should he become infected, she will kill him too, "in a heartbeat."
The next day, journeying through the derelict city, Selena rules out the idea that she and Jim could fall in love, asserting that nothing remains but the fight to survive. Still, Selena, a chemist, continues to help the recovering coma patient, feeding and advising him. Soon, they encounter two more survivors, Frank (Brendan Gleeson) and his teenage daughter Hannah (Megan Burns), still residing in an otherwise abandoned apartment tower. Invited to spend the night, Selena and Jim privately debate whether they should stick with Frank and Hannah. Selena states that if they slow her down, she will abandon them, while Jim says he wouldn't because they're good people; Selena warns Jim that caring about others more than personal survival is a sure way to get killed.
The next morning, Frank informs Jim and Selena that supplies, particularly water, are dwindling, and has them listen to a prerecorded, looped radio broadcast transmitted by soldiers at a blockade near Manchester, who claim to have "the answer to infection." The four survivors decide to take Frank's cab in search of the blockade, and they form a bond during their trip. Selena's steely resolve against feeling anything for her companions begins to soften. Conversely, Jim's experiences on the trip begin to toughen him up: he slays an infected child.
When they reach the seemingly deserted blockade, Frank becomes infected and is immediately shot by soldiers, who commandeer the cab and take Selena, Jim and Hannah to a fortified mansion under the command of Major Henry West (Christopher Eccleston). Hannah is in shock, and a distraught Selena and worried Jim reach out to each other romantically. Jim soon learns that West's "answer to infection" entails waiting for the Infected to starve to death (they never actually eat), while giving hope for community survival to his men by forcing sexual servitude on female survivors. Shocked by this violent plan, Jim attempts to escape with Selena and Hannah, but is subdued, along with "resident philosopher" Sergeant Farrell, who had tried to help. While Jim and Farrell are tied up for the night, Farrell theorises that there is no world wide epidemic, but rather that Great Britain has been quarantined. The next day, the two prisoners are led off into the woods to be executed. Meanwhile, Selena and Hannah are trapped as the soldiers circle, wanting to begin the rapes — albeit under a veneer of politesse — and Selena manoeuvres to stall for time.
Selena (Naomie Harris) and a bloody Jim are reunited
While escaping his captors after Farrell is shot, Jim spots the contrails of a jet aircraft flying high overhead and realizes that indeed, someone in the outside world is still functioning. He then improvises a plan to rescue his friends, first luring West out to the blockade, then running back to assault the soldiers' headquarters. He unleashes Mailer, an infected soldier that West kept chained outside for observation. While Mailer attacks and infects many of the soldiers, Jim kills others. Finally, covered in blood, Jim viciously attacks the soldier detaining Selena, leading her to believe that he may be infected. Raising her machete, she hesitates before striking Jim. He quips, "That was longer than a heartbeat," and the two kiss passionately. With Hannah in tow, they run to Frank's cab, but West appears, shooting Jim in the stomach. West is then killed by Mailer, allowing the trio to escape.
In a series of rapid edits, Selena and Hannah are shown rushing the wounded Jim into a deserted hospital, where Selena performs life-saving emergency procedures. Another twenty-eight days later, a bandaged Jim is shown waking up in recovery again, this time on one side of a double bed in a remote cottage. He goes downstairs, where Selena is sewing large swaths of fabric. At Hannah's alert, the three of them rush a huge cloth banner outside, adding the final letter to the word "HELLO", an attempt to signal a Finnish military jet which was previously observed flying overhead. As the approaching jet flies over the landscape, the Infected lie in the streets dying of starvation. After the jet zooms past the three waving survivors and their distress sign, Selena wonders aloud, "Do you think he saw us this time?"
The pilot can be heard saying "Lähetättekö helikopterin?", which in Finnish means "Will you send a helicopter?".
Alternative endings
The DVD extras include three alternative endings, all of which end with Jim dying. Two were filmed, while the third, a more radical departure, was only storyboarded.Jim dies at the hospital
In this ending, after Jim is shot, Selena and Hannah still rush him to the deserted hospital, but the scene is extended. Selena, with Hannah's assistance, attempts to perform life-saving procedures but cannot revive Jim. Selena is heartbroken, and Hannah, distraught, looks to her for guidance. Selena tells Hannah that they will go on; they pick up their guns and walk away from Jim's lifeless body. Selena and Hannah, fully armed, walk through the operating room doors, which gradually stop swinging.On the DVD commentary, Boyle and Garland explain that this was the original ending of the film's first cut, which was tested with preview audiences. It was ultimately rejected for seeming too bleak; the final exit from the hospital was intended to imply Selena and Hannah's survival, whereas test audiences felt that the women were marching off to certain death. Boyle and Garland express a preference for this alternate ending, calling it the "true ending". They comment that this ending brought Jim full circle, as he starts and finishes the story in bed in a deserted hospital.
This ending was added in the theatrical release of the film beginning on 25 July 2003, placed after the credits and prefaced with the words "...what if." The ending appears on some television broadcasts of the movie, such as those on Channel 4.
Rescue coda without Jim
This ending, for which only a rough edit was completed, is an alternate version of the potential rescue sequence shown at the very end of the released film. Here, the scenes are identical, except that this ending was intended to be placed after the first alternative ending where Jim dies, so he is absent. When Selena is sewing one of the banner letters in the cottage, she is seen facetiously talking to a chicken instead of Jim. And only Selena and Hannah are seen waving to the jet flying overhead in the final shots."Radical Alternative Ending"
The "Radical Alternative Ending" was not filmed and is presented on the DVD as a series of illustrated storyboards with voiceovers by Boyle and Garland. This ending would have taken the story in a radically different direction from the film's midpoint. When Frank is infected at the military blockade near Manchester, the soldiers do not enter the story. Instead, Jim, Selena and Hannah are somehow able to restrain the infected Frank, hoping they will find a cure for the virus nearby as suggested in the radio broadcast. They soon discover that the blockade had protected a large medical research complex, the same one featured in the first scene of the film where the virus was developed.Inside, the party is relieved to find a scientist self-barricaded inside a room with food and water. He won't open the door because he fears they will take his food, although he does admit that the "answer to infection is here." Unfortunately, he refuses to talk further because he doesn't want to make an emotional attachment to people who will soon be dead. After hours of failed attempts to break through the door or coax the man out, Jim eventually brings Hannah to the door and explains Frank's situation. The scientist reluctantly tells them that Frank can only be cured with a complete blood transfusion, and supplies them with the necessary equipment. After learning that he is the only match with Frank's blood type, Jim nobly sacrifices himself so that Frank can survive with his daughter. Just as his journey began, Jim is left alone in the abandoned medical facility, and Selena, Hannah and Frank move into the room with the man as a horde of the infected breach the complex. Strapped to the table as the chimp had been in the opening scene, the computer monitors showing death and destruction come to life around a thrashing, infected Jim.
Garland and Boyle explain that they conceptualised this ending to see what the film would be like if they did not expand the focus beyond the core four survivors. They ultimately decided against it because the idea of a total blood replacement as a cure was not credible.
Cast
Christopher Eccleston as Major West
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Cillian Murphy | Jim |
| Naomie Harris | Selena |
| Noah Huntley | Mark |
| Brendan Gleeson | Frank |
| Megan Burns | Hannah |
| Luke Mably | Private Clifton |
| Stuart McQuarrie | Sergeant Farrell |
| Ricci Harnett | Corporal Mitchell |
| Leo Bill | Private Jones |
| Junior Laniyan | Private Bell |
| Ray Panthaki | Private Bedford |
| Christopher Eccleston | Major Henry West |
| Sanjay Rambaruth | Private Davis |
| Marvin Campbell | Private Mailer |
On the DVD, director Boyle explains that, with the aim of preserving the suspension of disbelief, relatively unknown actors were cast in the film. Male lead Cillian Murphy had at the time starred primarily in small independent films, while female lead Naomie Harris had acted on British television as a child. However, actors Christopher Eccleston and Brendan Gleeson were somewhat well-known character actors. Eccleston, who went on to greater fame for his portrayal of the Ninth Doctor in the 2005 series of Doctor Who, had already appeared in films such as The Others, Gone in 60 Seconds, eXistenZ and Shallow Grave (another film directed by Boyle). Likewise, Gleeson had appeared in several films, including Braveheart, Lake Placid and The General.
Production
28 Days Later features scenes set in normally bustling parts of London such as Westminster Bridge, Piccadilly Circus, Horse Guards Parade and Oxford Street. In order to depict these locations as desolate, the film crew closed off sections of street for minutes at a time, usually in early morning to minimize disruption. Portions of the film were shot on a Canon XL1 digital video camera.[1] DV cameras are much smaller and more manoeuvrable than traditional film cameras, which would have been impractical on such brief shoots.The scenes of the M1 motorway completely devoid of traffic were also filmed within very limited time periods. A mobile police roadblock slowed traffic sufficiently to leave a long section of carriageway empty while the scene was filmed. The section depicted in the film was actually located at Milton Keynes, nowhere near Manchester. For the London scene where Jim walks by the overturned doubledecker bus, the film crew placed the bus on its side and removed it when the shot was finished, all within 20 minutes.
Filming took place prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks, and in the audio commentary Boyle notes the parallel between the "missing persons" flyers seen at the beginning of the film and similar flyers posted in New York City in the wake of 9/11. Boyle adds that his crew probably would not have been granted permission to close off Downing Street for filming after the terrorist attacks in New York.
While travelling around London at the beginning of the film, Jim picks up a copy of the Evening Standard. The front page created by the filmmakers carries a single headline printed in large font: "EVACUATION", with the sub-heading "Mass exodus of British people causes global chaos." Above the main headline, there are three small subheadings with page numbers- "Who will stop them?", "Refugee Crisis Looms" and "Dangerous Animals". Below the headline, the front page contains a list of London's boroughs with evacuation information on the left side with the main body containing the following smaller headlines, in order:
- "Blair declares a state of emergency"
- "Military ordered 'shoot to kill'"
- "Government Check points overrun"
- "UN to build giant refugee camps"
- "Chaos at all London airports"
- "Government call for calm"
- "Military patrol waters around Britain"
- "All roads around London grid-locked"
The mansion used in the film was Trafalgar Park near Salisbury. Many rooms in the house, including the Cipriani-painted music room and the main hall, were filmed with minimal set decoration. The scenes occurring upstairs were actually filmed downstairs, as the mansion's owner resided upstairs.
One month before the film was released in cinemas, various newspapers included a short panel comic book style promotion for the film, in which various scenes showed a chaotic London during those 27 days with people trying to escape the city en masse.
Style and inspiration
On the DVD commentary, Boyle and Garland frequently call it a post apocalyptic, horror and zombie film, commenting on scenes that were specific references to George A. Romero's original Dead trilogy. However, during the initial marketing of the film Boyle did try to distance the film from such labels. Boyle identified John Wyndham's The Day of the Triffids as Garland's original inspiration for the story[2].Although 28 Days Later and its sequel 28 Weeks Later are often categorized by many as a film of the zombie genre, the infected portrayed in the film fit few if any aspects of the traditional zombie archetype. While zombies are generally slow, unintelligent, hungry for human flesh, and are almost universally undead, the infected are merely living human beings overcome with senseless rage brought on by a highly infectious virus. They can be killed like any human being and possess no superhuman abilities, apart from an arguably increased resistance to pain and heightened, manic strength. At the same time, the infected demonstrate several zombie-like characteristics, including a bite-transmitted condition that results in the affected individual's loss of personality, impaired cognitive function, murderous rage and discoloured eyes. Although highly aggressive, they nevertheless eventually die of hunger and/or thirst as they lose any desire for food and water, and demonstrate no natural instincts to hunt or forage for some.
Reception
The film was a considerable success at the box office and became highly profitable on a budget of about £5 million ($9.8 million). In the UK, it took £6.1 million ($12 million), while in the US it became a surprise hit, taking over $45 million despite a limited release at fewer than 1,500 screens across the country. The film garnered around $82.7 million worldwide.Critical views of the film were very positive (with a rating of 89% at RottenTomatoes [3]) the L.A. Times describing it as a "stylistic tour de force", and efilmcritic.com describing it as "raw, blistering and joyously uncompromising".
Soundtrack and score
28 Days Later: The Soundtrack Album was released on 17 June 2003. It features most of John Murphy's original score and tracks from Brian Eno, Grandaddy and Blue States.
Sequels
A sequel, 28 Weeks Later, was released on 11 May 2007.[5] Danny Boyle and Alex Garland took producing roles alongside Andrew Macdonald. The plot revolves around the arrival of American troops about seven months after the incidents in the original film, attempting to revitalise a nearly desolate Britain. The cast for this sequel includes Robert Carlyle, Rose Byrne, Jeremy Renner, Harold Perrineau, Catherine McCormack and Idris Elba.Fox Atomic Comics, in association with HarperCollins, is publishing a graphic novel bridging the time gap between 28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later, entitled , written by Steve Niles.
In March of 2007, 28 Days Later director and 28 Weeks Later executive producer Danny Boyle was interviewed by an Irish radio station, where he claimed to be interested in making a third film in the series, 28 Months Later.[6]
Parodies and pop culture references
The film has inspired a number of spoofs:- Comedy short film 48 Hours Later (2003) follows the same plot of a man waking to a plague-infested world.[7]
- Malaysian comedy short 28 Hours Later (2005) relocates the basic plot of 28 Days Later to Kuala Lumpur.[8]
- "Team Tiger Awesome" created a series of videos called 28 Day Slater. Whilst the title is clearly a play on 28 Days Later, the plots actually parody Saved by the Bell and feature a fictional representation of Mario Lopez, who believes that he is Slater, his character from Saved by the Bell, during the month of February (a 28-day month).[9]
- In the popular online game The Kingdom of Loathing a virus infected the players. The Council of loathing made a temporal rift to Seaside town, 28 days later where players could get items to cure the virus.
- Another comedy short filmed by Galacticast called "28 Seconds Later" involves a montage of events happening between 28 second pauses.[10]
- At the conclusion of the 2004 film Shaun of the Dead, a comedy that sends up the horror genre, a television broadcaster can be heard stating that reports that the zombies were caused by rage-infected monkeys were absurd.
References
1. ^ Bankston, Douglas. "Anthony Dod Mantle, DFF injects the apocalyptic 28 Days Later with a strain of digital video.", American Cinematographer, 2003-07-01. Retrieved on 2007-05-01.
2. ^ Mark Kermode (2007). A capital place for panic attacks (html). Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
3. ^ Rotton Tomateos Score]
4. ^ Kitty Empire (2002). Godspeed You! Black Emperor: Adjusting to Fame After 28 Days Later (html). Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved on 2006-11-26.
5. ^ Gingold, Michael. "July 14: Fox sets HILLS II and more release dates", Fangoria, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
6. ^ [1]
7. ^ 48 Hours Later on IMDb
8. ^ 28 Hours Later on IMDb
9. ^ 28 Day Slater, episode 1: "The Job Interview", iFilm
10. ^ 28 Seconds Later at the Galicast website
2. ^ Mark Kermode (2007). A capital place for panic attacks (html). Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved on 2007-05-12.
3. ^ Rotton Tomateos Score]
4. ^ Kitty Empire (2002). Godspeed You! Black Emperor: Adjusting to Fame After 28 Days Later (html). Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved on 2006-11-26.
5. ^ Gingold, Michael. "July 14: Fox sets HILLS II and more release dates", Fangoria, 2006-07-14. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
6. ^ [1]
7. ^ 48 Hours Later on IMDb
8. ^ 28 Hours Later on IMDb
9. ^ 28 Day Slater, episode 1: "The Job Interview", iFilm
10. ^ 28 Seconds Later at the Galicast website
External links
| 28 Days Later series | |
|---|---|
| Films | 28 Days Later (2002) • 28 Weeks Later (2007) • 28 Months Later (TBA) |
| Directors | Danny Boyle • Juan Carlos Fresnadillo |
| Music | • 28 Weeks Later Soundtrack • In the House - In a Heartbeat |
| Graphic novel | |
| Fictional universe | Rage • District 1 • Characters |
Danny Boyle
Born September 20 1956
Radcliffe, Greater Manchester, England, UK
Died
Occupation director, producer
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Born September 20 1956
Radcliffe, Greater Manchester, England, UK
Died
Occupation director, producer
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Andrew MacDonald was also a pen name used by William Luther Pierce.
Andrew Macdonald is a Scottish film producer, best known for his collaborations with screenwriter John Hodge and director Danny Boyle, including Shallow Grave (1994), Trainspotting
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Andrew Macdonald is a Scottish film producer, best known for his collaborations with screenwriter John Hodge and director Danny Boyle, including Shallow Grave (1994), Trainspotting
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Alex Garland (born 1970) is a British novelist and screenwriter.
Garland is the son of political cartoonist Nick Garland. He attended University College School, Hampstead, and the University of Manchester, where he studied art history.
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Garland is the son of political cartoonist Nick Garland. He attended University College School, Hampstead, and the University of Manchester, where he studied art history.
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Cillian Murphy
Murphy at the N.Y. Film Festival premiere
of Breakfast on Pluto, 1 October 2005
Birth name Cillian Murphy
Born May 25 1976
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Murphy at the N.Y. Film Festival premiere
of Breakfast on Pluto, 1 October 2005
Birth name Cillian Murphy
Born May 25 1976
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Naomie Harris
Birth name Naomie Melanie Harris
Born September 6 1976
London, England, United Kingdom
Died
Occupation
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Birth name Naomie Melanie Harris
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London, England, United Kingdom
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Brendan Gleeson
Brendan Gleeson as Alastor "Mad-eye" Moody.
Birth name Brendan Gleeson
Born March 29 1955
Dublin, Ireland
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Brendan Gleeson as Alastor "Mad-eye" Moody.
Birth name Brendan Gleeson
Born March 29 1955
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Christopher Eccleston
Born January 16 1964
Little Hulton, Lancashire, England
Died
Occupation actor
Awards
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Born January 16 1964
Little Hulton, Lancashire, England
Died
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Megan Burns (born June 25 1986) is a British musician and former award-winning actress from Liverpool, England.
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Early Life
Megan Burns was born in Liverpool in 1986 on the 25th of June. When she was three years old, her father left her and her mother...... Click the link for more information.
John Murphy (born 1965) is a British film composer. He is a self taught multi-instrumental musician who began his career in the 1980s working notably with The Lotus Eaters, Thomas Lang and Claudia Brucken.
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2] (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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"Dieu et mon droit" [2] (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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28 Weeks Later is a 2007 British post-apocalyptic science fiction horror film, and sequel to the 2002 film 28 Days Later.
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All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile
28 Weeks Later is a 2007 British post-apocalyptic science fiction horror film, and sequel to the 2002 film 28 Days Later.
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The United Kingdom has been influential in the technological, commercial, and artistic development of cinema and probably second only to the USA in producing the
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Apocalyptic fiction is a sub-genre of science fiction (or, in some cases, the more general category speculative fiction) that is concerned with the end of civilization through nuclear war, plague, or some other general disaster.
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Danny Boyle
Born September 20 1956
Radcliffe, Greater Manchester, England, UK
Died
Occupation director, producer
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Born September 20 1956
Radcliffe, Greater Manchester, England, UK
Died
Occupation director, producer
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Cillian Murphy
Murphy at the N.Y. Film Festival premiere
of Breakfast on Pluto, 1 October 2005
Birth name Cillian Murphy
Born May 25 1976
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Murphy at the N.Y. Film Festival premiere
of Breakfast on Pluto, 1 October 2005
Birth name Cillian Murphy
Born May 25 1976
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Naomie Harris
Birth name Naomie Melanie Harris
Born September 6 1976
London, England, United Kingdom
Died
Occupation
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Birth name Naomie Melanie Harris
Born September 6 1976
London, England, United Kingdom
Died
Occupation
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Christopher Eccleston
Born January 16 1964
Little Hulton, Lancashire, England
Died
Occupation actor
Awards
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Born January 16 1964
Little Hulton, Lancashire, England
Died
Occupation actor
Awards
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Rage is a fictional virus appearing in the 2002 film 28 Days Later directed by Danny Boyle, and in the 2007 film 28 Weeks Later directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo. It also appears in the graphic novel .
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