The apocalyptic pandemic coined the “Rage Virus” in the 2002 hit 28 Days Later is still with us, 28 years later. The not-so-subtly named illness is a social mutation and a metaphor for our own fractured times.

28 Years Later, Danny Boyle and Alex Garland’s long-awaited return to this cinematic universe, is set exactly 10,228 days after the original outbreak. There is no word count large enough to recap what has happened IRL in the last 28 years, but in this world, society has quarantined, rewilded, and brutalized. In the words of Bo Burnham, “there it is again, that funny feeling…”

What Happens in 28 Years Later?

The new film, the third in the series, opens on the “Holy Island” of Lindisfarne, where survivors of the virus have built a rustic dystopia. If you’re a fan of The Last of Us, Lindisfarne is Jackson, but with a spooky Yellowjackets oeuvre; masked hunters, primitive rituals, and the like.

Jamie (Aaron Taylor‑Johnson) puts his son Spike (Alfie Williams) through the coming-of-age rites of manhood through a hunting excursion off-island. Armed with a bow and arrow, the pair face evolved infected on the mainland – a tense chase sequence through marshfields, filmed using iPhones, drones, and even a goat-mounted camera.

They see that this group of infected seem to be led by an Alpha, showing that the ever-evolving virus is becoming stronger and smarter.

They spend the night in an abandoned cottage, observing a bonfire in the distance, before returning to Lindisfarne. The source of the fire, they later learn, is a spooky survivor Dr. Ian Kelson (Ralph Fiennes). The community of Lindisfarne fears Dr. Kelson, fueled by rumors that he ritualistically burns bodies like a freak.

Now is a good time to mention Isla (Jodie Comer), Jamie’s wife and Spike’s mother. Our girl Isla is sick as a dog, terminally so. Spike wonders of Dr. Kelson might be able to help his mother, and after discovering Jamie’s cheating ass with another woman, he says “to hell with it” and returns to the mainland with his mom.

28 years later
Sony Pictures

Meanwhile, a group of Swedish NATO soldiers have been washed ashore with a sunken boat. They are almost no match for the infected, leaving one sole survivor – a soldier named Erik, who soon crosses paths with Isla and Spike. The trio band together and continue their search for Dr. Kelson.

In a tense scene involving an infected pregnant woman—again, welcome back The Last of Us season two—Erik is killed by an Alpha, who is subdued by Dr. Kelson, who arrives seemingly from nowhere. Dr. Kelson brings Spike, Isla, and the aforementioned woman’s now-infected newborn to his sanctuary of sterilized bones.

Dr. Kelson confirms that Isla’s cancer is terminal, and upon her request, euthanizes her with a morphine dart. He cleans her skull and hands it to Spike, who places it atop Dr. Kelson’s boneyard shrine.

Let’s fast forward through another close encounter with the infected, bringing us to Spike’s return to Lindisfarne. He places the baby at the gates of the village with a note addressed to Jamie, promising to return when he’s ready.

How does 28 Years Later end?

A fitting number of days later (read: 28), Spike is rescued from a pack of infected by a cult-like group of survivors led by Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell). This sudden tonal swerve—neither horror nor satire, but an unsettling mix—sets up the next chapter. Spike’s alignment with Jimmy’s cult, at the film’s close, sets a collision course: the grieving, virus-scarred reality of Spike met with Jimmy’s cultic salvation.

So, it looks like we’re in for another film. We’re just left with one question, what titles are left?

We kid. It’s called 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, and it’s already scheduled for January 2026.