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    . ݁˖ . ݁ᴸⁱᵍʰᵗ ˢʰⁱⁿᵉˢ ᵉᵛᵉⁿ ᵐᵒʳᵉ ᵖᵒʷᵉʳᶠᵘˡˡʸ
    . ݁˖ . ݁. ݁݁₊ ⊹˖ .
    ݁ᵇᵉᶜᵃᵘˢᵉ ᵗʰᵉʳᵉ ⁱˢ ᵈᵃʳᵏⁿᵉˢˢ ⁱⁿ ᵗʰᵉ ʷᵒʳˡᵈ ݁˖. ݁˖ . ݁

  • haaaaate how making headcanons about a character being aro/ace/aroace is getting hijacked by homophobes who don’t want gay ships of their fav characters. WE ARE NOT THE SAME!!!!! SCRAM!!!!!!!!! 👊💥👊💥👊💥

  • Spoilers for 28 years later

    Something I really was not expecting from 28 years later was the commentary on zombies and how we have come to perceive them (culturally speaking) as completely deshumanized bodies that we can kill gleefully.

    28 years later is constantly reminding you that its zombies are infected people, not mythical creatures completly removed from us. That doesn't make them less dangerous, or killing them in self defense (or even mercy-killing them) wrong. But it does give a sinister spin on the "zombies killer" warrior figure that a lot of zombie media come to present as a given.

    The movie does that through two main narative devices. Humanizing the infected and deconstructing the ideology behind the zombies killer figure.

    It humanizes the infected notably by:

    • Introducing the Alphas. They are an extra threats sure, but they are also capable of reasons.
    • The entire plot with the pregnant infected woman.
    • The fact the everyone in Great-Britain is treated the same by the outisde world, infected or not.
    • Isla's disease. Isla is sick from a mystery illness that impairs her mental capacities. Isla is not infected, but she is often confused and sometimes even physically lashes out in way that are violent (when she wakes up and break everything on her nightstand, in the same scene she also turns against Jamie). I don't think it is a coincidence that Isla is the only character in the entire movie that kills an infected with her bare hands, and then has trouble remembering it. It is also not a coincidence that she is the first one showing compassion on screen to an infected.
    • The fact that Dr Kelson treats infected and non-infected in the exact same way in death and does not immediately turns to killing the infected to defend himself from them.

    It deconstructs the figure of the zombie killer by:

    • Having Jamie being a troubling figure and an even more troubling father figure. He insists on taking his son on his first killing trip three years before it is common to do so (something the movie points out explicitly twice). He says he likes the smell of rotting carcasses. He lies to make his son appear more heroic (I am not saying that Spike was cowardly or anything, but still Jamie does embelish how this first hunt went).
    • The community that sanctions this kind of attitude is very much coded as conservative in an uncomfortable way. It is for example, routinely visually compared with English history (through the display of medieval battles and images of the boers war). However everytime it is compared to the medieval era (the mythical chivalric) the images shown are very clearly extracted from movies and artistic depictions rather than rigourous reconstruction. The only real images shown are from most recent colonial wars in which England commited war crimes.

    It is nice to see a zombie film not taking the zombies as acceptable killable meatsack as a given.

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