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  • 28 Weeks Later
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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. The film was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, and was released in the United Kingdom and in the United States on 11 May 2007.
  • 28 Weeks Later is a 2007 post-apocalyptic, science-fiction, horror film. It is also a sequel to 28 Days Later. The film was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, and was released in the United Kingdom and in the United States on May 11, 2007. Set 28 weeks after the initial outbreak of the Rage virus from 28 Days Later. The film focus on England rebuilding society with the help of the U.S. military. Like the first film the sequel focuses on a small group banning together to survive, but unlike the original, the sequel is more action packed and has bigger set pieces.
  • Plot Don (Robert Carlyle) and his wife Alice (Catherine McCormack) prepare dinner where they are living with an old couple and two other people who are the only survivors in a heavily reinforced cottage somewhere in rural, Rage virus–infected island of Great Britain. As they are taking their meal, they suddenly hear a young boy banging on the door begging to be let in. At first they argue not to open it due to the Rage virus' outbreak. Don opens the door to let the child inside, who says he is from Sandford and has been fleeing his parents who are now infected. Moments later, a pack of the infected discover the hideout and break in, quickly overwhelming the group. Alice refuses to leave without the boy; Don abandons Alice and escapes in a boat, emerging as the sole survivor.
  • As implied by the title, the story of 28 Weeks Later -- the sequel to the 2002 horror film 28 Days Later -- begins twenty-eight weeks after the events of the first film, where a literal Hate Plague ravaged Britain: a U.S.-led NATO force has established a foothold in the Isle of Dogs, where it's started the process of repatriating the countless English citizens left stranded after leaving their country during the Rage virus outbreak. Those who return end up quarantined in "District One" under heavy surveillance by US soldiers; Don Harris (played by Robert Carlyle), one of the quarantined, became one of the few people trapped in London who managed to survive the outbreak. Haunted by the memory of being forced to abandon his wife during an attack by a horde of infected Rage carriers, Don ends
  • Don Harris and his heterochromic wife Alice are holed up in a remote countryside cottage in England during the original outbreak of the Rage virus in Britain, and are preparing dinner for four other survivors there with them: the elderly Geoff and Sally, the cold and steely Jacob and the helpless Karen whose boyfriend abandoned the group. Don and Alice have two young children, who were saved from the outbreak in Britain by a school trip abroad. As the group all sit down and eat, they suddenly hear a young boy outside banging on the door and begging to be let in. Don reluctantly lets the boy into the cottage, and, while having food, the boy says that he is from the nearby town Sandford and has been fleeing from his infected parents and a horde of many other infected. While explaining this,
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Tagline
  • When days turn to weeks...
Cast
  • Catherine McCormack,
  • Jeremy Renner
  • Robert Carlyle,
  • Rose Byrne,
Editing
  • Chris Gill
Runtime
  • 5940.0
Producer
  • Allon Reich,
  • Andrew Macdonald,
  • Enrique Lopez Lavigne
Name
  • 28
Language
  • English
Preceded By
  • 28
Cinematography
  • Enrique Chediak
Music
  • John Murphy
Distributor
  • 20
Released
  • 2007-05-06
Rating
  • 7
Budget
  • 1.5E7
Writer
  • Juan Carlos Fresnadillo,
  • Rowan Joffe
Director
  • Juan Carlos Fresnadillo
imagecat
  • 28
abstract
  • 28 Weeks Later is a 2007 British post-apocalyptic science fiction horror film, and sequel to the 2002 film 28 Days Later. The film was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, and was released in the United Kingdom and in the United States on 11 May 2007.
  • 28 Weeks Later is a 2007 post-apocalyptic, science-fiction, horror film. It is also a sequel to 28 Days Later. The film was directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, and was released in the United Kingdom and in the United States on May 11, 2007. Set 28 weeks after the initial outbreak of the Rage virus from 28 Days Later. The film focus on England rebuilding society with the help of the U.S. military. Like the first film the sequel focuses on a small group banning together to survive, but unlike the original, the sequel is more action packed and has bigger set pieces.
  • Plot Don (Robert Carlyle) and his wife Alice (Catherine McCormack) prepare dinner where they are living with an old couple and two other people who are the only survivors in a heavily reinforced cottage somewhere in rural, Rage virus–infected island of Great Britain. As they are taking their meal, they suddenly hear a young boy banging on the door begging to be let in. At first they argue not to open it due to the Rage virus' outbreak. Don opens the door to let the child inside, who says he is from Sandford and has been fleeing his parents who are now infected. Moments later, a pack of the infected discover the hideout and break in, quickly overwhelming the group. Alice refuses to leave without the boy; Don abandons Alice and escapes in a boat, emerging as the sole survivor. Over the course of 28 weeks, the infected have all starved to death and Britain is declared relatively safe again, allowing for re-population. The re-construction of Britain begins. The process proceeds throughout the weeks. An American-led NATO force, under the command of Brigadier General Stone (Idris Elba), begins repopulating the country with both old and new residents. The chief medical officer of District 1, Major Scarlet Ross (Rose Byrne), is surprised by the inclusion of the very young, amongst whom are Tammy (Imogen Poots) and Andy (Mackintosh Muggleton), Don and Alice's children who were in Spain during the initial outbreak. At 12 years old, Andy is the youngest person in Britain, and during their subsequent medical inspection, Lima notes Andy's heterochromia, a trait he inherited from his mother. Andy and Tammy are subsequently admitted to District 1, a heavily-reinforced, fully functional section of London on the Isle of Dogs guarded by the United States Army, including a detachment from Delta acting as a rooftop unit observation team. With them are a sergeant, Doyle (Jeremy Renner), and an observation helicopter pilot Flynn (Harold Perrineau). The children are reunited with their father Don, who is now head caretaker of the district. Inside their new penthouse, Don tearfully recounts his escape, saying that Alice was killed by the infected, but misrepresents the truth, saying that he witnessed Alice's death, to hide the fact that he fled and abandoned her to her fate. The very next day, the two children slip out of the safe zone to return to their old home, where Andy discovers Alice, disheveled but alive. Andy and Tammy are recaptured by the US Army while Alice is decontaminated. A blood test reveals that she is infected with the Rage virus, but displaying few symptoms, labeling her an asymptomatic carrier, as evidenced by her bloodied eye. Though Scarlet wants to keep Alice alive to seek a possible vaccine or cure, she is overruled by Stone, who wants Alice killed to prevent a possible further outbreak of Rage. Don visits his children in a holding room, where they confront him about his version of Alice's death. He then makes an unauthorized visit to Alice in her isolation cell, using his caretaker passcard to bypass security, and asks for forgiveness, which she seemingly grants. But when they kiss, the Rage virus in her saliva immediately infects Don, much to Alice's horror. Now infected, he brutally kills her and goes on the prowl in District 1, attacking and infecting soldiers. The outbreak forces the area into lockdown. All the civilians are quarantined in safe rooms, which Don forces his way into, and begins to infect the confined civilians. Scarlet manages to rescue Tammy from containment but Andy gets separated from the group. Doyle and the soldiers are ordered, at first, to shoot the infected, but the chaos escalates into "Code Red": a general extermination of the populace to prevent any possible spread of the Rage virus, after which everyone gets fired upon. Doyle, unable to bring himself to comply with the drastic order, abandons his post and escapes with Scarlet, the children and others through an underground tunnel. Stone then orders that District 1 be fire-bombed, killing the populace and causing massive devastation. Meanwhile, large numbers of the infected, including Don, escape the initialized bombardment, occupying the city. Stopping to rendezvous with Flynn's helicopter at the derelict remains of Regent's Park, Scarlet informs Doyle that the key to curing infection is in the children, who may have the same immunity as their mother. Flynn arrives by helicopter to pick up Doyle, but refuses to take anyone else, stating that they would be blown out of the air if he attempts to break the Code Red protocol. Suddenly, one member of the group grabs on to the helicopter skids, screaming at Flynn to take him with him. Flynn attempts to shake him off the helicopter, sweeping over a horde of oncoming infected, killing them with the rotor blades, and dislodging the man. Flynn tells Doyle to head to Wembley Stadium, and Doyle heads off with his group of civilians. The group breaks into an abandoned car to escape the infected and the clouds of chemical gas being vented into the city by the military. In the process of starting the car by pushing it, Doyle is killed by soldiers with flamethrowers. Scarlet drives into the London Underground to evade a pursuing Apache helicopter, where she, armed with Doyle's M4 rifle, and the children continue on foot. She tries to guide their way with the night vision mode on the rifle's optic. When they are separated, Scarlet is ambushed and killed by Don, who has followed them. Don attacks Andy and bites him. Tammy shoots Don and saves Andy from death, though he is infected with the Rage virus. Andy remains symptom-free like his mother, though his eye turns the same color as his mother's was after infection. The children continue to Wembley Stadium and are picked up by an at first reluctant Flynn, who flies them across the English Channel to France which Doyle instructed him to do. While flying, they see the incinerated District 1 and the remains of London. No one alive knows that Andy is a carrier of the virus. Another 28 days pass. Someone calls for help over the radio of Flynn’s helicopter, which turns out to be abandoned. As people's screams are heard, a swarm of Infected are shown running through a subway exit. The horde was shown running toward the Eiffel Tower, revealing the Rage Virus to have spread to mainland Europe.
  • As implied by the title, the story of 28 Weeks Later -- the sequel to the 2002 horror film 28 Days Later -- begins twenty-eight weeks after the events of the first film, where a literal Hate Plague ravaged Britain: a U.S.-led NATO force has established a foothold in the Isle of Dogs, where it's started the process of repatriating the countless English citizens left stranded after leaving their country during the Rage virus outbreak. Those who return end up quarantined in "District One" under heavy surveillance by US soldiers; Don Harris (played by Robert Carlyle), one of the quarantined, became one of the few people trapped in London who managed to survive the outbreak. Haunted by the memory of being forced to abandon his wife during an attack by a horde of infected Rage carriers, Don ends up reunited with his two children, Tammy and Andy, when they become new residents of District One. Since the Infected starved to death weeks ago and no evidence suggests the plague crossed over into other species, the survivors begin the process of trying to rebuild their former lives while the NATO forces begin an extensive effort to clean up further areas of London to prepare for rehabitation. When Tammy and Andy sneak out of District 1 in order to visit their former home, however, the survivors -- and the soldiers protecting them -- soon discover lingering traces of the Rage virus, which kicks off a frantic fight to keep the plague from spreading once more. * After the End: The premise of the sequel involved attempts by the U.S. Military to recolonize Britain after all the Infected were apparently cleared out. * Air Vent Passageway: Andy uses one to escape a locked room after the infection spreads amongst the crowded civilians in District 1. * Justified in that Andy is small enough to fit inside an air duct. * America Saves the Day: Inverted; by the end of the film, America has succeeded in making it worse. * The kids make it worse by sneaking out of the safe zone, and Dan makes it worse by sneaking past security and kissing his diseased wife. America had it under control until a couple Brits made some very stupid decisions. * Apathetic Citizens: They've all just survived a viral outbreak. One assumes that even the ones who were outside of the UK and returned had been shown videos and been told how virulent the Infected were before they even returned. Yet when they are herded to a secure location for their own safety - no matter how unsafe that actually turned out to be in the end - they bicker and complain to the troops about it. * Possibly because herding everyone together in a confined space at an accessible level was one of the worst things they could do. * Blind Alley: Seen in one of the short films made for 28 Weeks Later. A man is pressed up against a wall as the Rage virus infected run past the alley — presumably their blinding anger prevents them from doing common sense things like looking around for someone who's gone out of sight. * Chekhov's Gun: Heterochromia. Genre Savvy tropers can pick out the entire plot of the movie simply from one conversation in the first few minutes. * Daylight Horror: The beginning sequence and the final image of the movie, particularly. * Death By Pragmatism: Inverted. When the quarantined civilians inside Sector One initially break out, chased by/mixed with Infected, the U.S. soldiers are ordered to only fire on infected. This causes their lines to be swamped by panicking civilians and infected that weren't identified fast enough. Since the crowd of civilians and infected were coming out of one large set of doors, with multiple automatic weapons trained on it, if the soldiers had unloaded immediately on everyone coming through, they might have been able to stop the infection right there. * Decoy Protagonist: Robert Carlyle's character who we start the movie following is either this or a Sacrificial Lion. * Downer Ending: A Bittersweet Ending for Andy and Tammy (they survived, but their parents are dead and Andy is a carrier), this trope for everything else. London has been decimated once again by the virus and the subsequent firebombing, all of the thousands of London settlers have been horribly killed, and the Infected have reached France, meaning all of Europe is basically screwed. * Not sure about that. Consider that there was only a fairly small contingent of U.S./NATO troops present as security for the repatriation effort. If the infection were to reach the mainland, the governments of Europe would likely bring their full military force to bear against the hordes. Also, the virus has a miniscule incubation period and is transmitted by bodily fluids, meaning that it's pretty damn easy to identify an infected individual. See, modern militaries have these awesome things that can hover around and rain death upon ground forces from a safe distance in the air - they're called helicopter gunships. We also have things like Gatling guns, explosives, and weapons of mass destruction. And since the infected are still technically human in terms of squishiness, conventional weapons are effective against them, and a neutron bomb even more so (remember the firebom strike on London did wipe out most of the infected). * And even Andy and Tammy's Bittersweet Ending is highly questionable, since the presence of the Infected in France strongly implies that Andy somehow infected Tammy, whose first act as an infected would probably be to kill her brother. * Eiffel Tower Effect: Invoked quite literally in the final scene. * Eye Scream: This sequel plays this trope horrifyingly straight. After reuniting with his wife, Don gets infected by the virus and kills Alice by gouging her eyes out. This is a direct comparison to the first movie's hero, who does the same to a soldier without being infected. * Although she might have rather died out of him beating the shit out of her first and then ripping her trachea off by biting. * Harbinger of Impending Doom: When a frantic child is allowed into the barricaded home that Don, Alice, and a group of other survivors are holed up in just weeks after the infection began, his arrival portends the events to come. * Fake American: Australian Rose Byrne and, somewhat oddly, British Idris Elba as American Soldiers. * Helicopter Blender: As graphic and wonderful and horrifying as much of the film. * Heroic Sacrifice: Doyle pushes off the others to safety before getting torched by one of the extermination squads. Possibly foreshadowed with this line: * Hey, It's That Guy!: Looks like Sergeant James' 2nd tour didn't end well. * Idiot Ball: Quite apart from the above example, if either the Chief Medical Officer or Sgt Doyle had bothered to explain why the children were so important, even to the children, someone might have been more careful and we might just have avoided the infection of France and the breach of the sea border which was holding back the infection. * The lack of the most basic security measures in District One. No effective barrier on bridges and few guards. It's about as easy as sneaking out of high school campus during lunch break. * Easier, actually -- have you seen the security in American schools these days? * On the children's part, they decided to sneak out of District One even after the military told them explicitly not to do so and why. As poor as the security is on the military's part, they may not have been expecting someone to do something as stupid as what Tammy and Andy did. * Don holds the biggest one of all. He pretty much single-handedly caused the second outbreak. * The Apache helicopter was firing at a car driving fleeing from fire and poison gas because a bunch of insane Infected would totally do that... * See the It Can Think entry below for why this is actually plausible. * Inferred Holocaust: The infection has reached France by the end. * And assuming Andy's the one who spread it there -- and he probably is -- he and Tammy are likely dead. * It Can Think: The Infected in this movie seem to have a bit more going on upstairs than the ones in 28 Days Later, particularly Don who not only manages to survive the firebombing of District 1, but tracks his children through London all the way to the Underground. He also uses a gun as a blunt weapon when he kills Major Scarlett. He's not the only Infected to survive District 1, either, which implies he's not the only one who's retained some measure of intelligent reasoning. * All There in the Manual. A line in 28 Days Later: The Aftermath indicates that while the Rage virus causes the higher brain functions to atrophy after a few days, victims still retain a lot of their reasoning skills until then. Presumably as recent infectees, Don and the others in 28 Weeks Later hadn't yet reached that stage. * It Got Worse: The Movie! * Kick the Dog: The Movie! Of special note is Alice, who is left to die by her husband only to survive and eventually be found by the military, who discover she's a Rage carrier and plan to kill her, and then reignites the infection and winds up getting her eyes gouged out by the husband who ditched her. * The London Underground: Tammy and Andy are forced to travel through an Underground packed with corpses. * Love Hurts: And how. An estranged couple, each thinking the other dead, reunites and is happy that they're both alive and well... and kiss, starting the plague anew (and directly leading to the Eye Scream mentioned above). * Mismatched Eyes: Both Alice and Andy have one brown and one blue eye, a condition called heterochromia. This becomes important later when Alice is found alive, and is the only known person to become a carrier of the plague without succumbing to it. * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Rampant. * Poor Communication Kills: Doyle might not have been torched if he had yelled out "US friendly, hold your fire!" * Perhaps, but he was standing in a cloud of poison gas, so he was dead either way. * Room Full of Zombies: One of the infected creates this by getting into a room of normal people during a lockdown. * Scylla and Charybdis: As Code Red was being executed, a survivor in a warehouse remarked, "We take one step out that door, if the infected don't get us, the snipers will." * Later, Major Scarlett was forced to navigate through a dark, dangerous subway to prevent being killed by Apache helicopters patrolling the poison-gas-filled streets. This results in an infected Don ambushing and beating her to death when she was searching for Andy. The children were able to make it to safety. * Shoot the Shaggy Dog: The virus spreads to France. * Synthetic Plague * Technically Living Zombie: The Infected, again. * This Loser Is You: Within the first ten minutes of the film, during the welcome back speech, the woman says "As you can see, District 1 is currently under the protection of the U.S. Army." This may have been replaced with "Look around. You're screwed.", which is clearly proven in the next ten minutes. * Too Dumb to Live: The Virus wiped out the entire population of Britain in under a month, but apparently despite the fact that the Virus was only contained due Britain being an island, the U.S. Military deemed a mere six months to be enough time to adequately classify it as safe. Realistically, Britain would have been under a UN Quarantine for decades if not centuries to eliminate any lingering trace of The Virus before any attempt at recolonisation were attempted. * Despite its virulence, the disease was limited to infection by contact with bodily fluids, heavily limiting the risk under proper safety precautions. This combined with the pressure of the massive refugee population would have pushed the recolonization forward despite of the risks. The Idiot Ball is grabbed only when it's made apparent just how poor the security measures actually are, failing even at the most mundane level. * There are multiple instances throughout this movie where the virus would have been stopped if only the US military has placed guards, well, anywhere, really. Two kids are able to easily sneak out of the safety zone by running down the middle of the street. There should have been guards, heavy duty fencing, and gates at that bridge. There should have been full-time guards stationed outside the clean room that Alice was locked in, considering they knew she held a virus that was able to wipe out an entire country in a month. Raged Robert should have been noticed and caught within minutes in a well guarded facility. Seriously, was everyone on this detail just too proud to submit to guard duty? * Typhoid Mary: Alice is an asymptomatic Rage carrier, and it's implied at the end that Andy may have become one as well. * Viewers Are Goldfish: About 15 minutes after the opening we're treated to a flashback to it. * Zombie Apocalypse: Yet again.
  • Don Harris and his heterochromic wife Alice are holed up in a remote countryside cottage in England during the original outbreak of the Rage virus in Britain, and are preparing dinner for four other survivors there with them: the elderly Geoff and Sally, the cold and steely Jacob and the helpless Karen whose boyfriend abandoned the group. Don and Alice have two young children, who were saved from the outbreak in Britain by a school trip abroad. As the group all sit down and eat, they suddenly hear a young boy outside banging on the door and begging to be let in. Don reluctantly lets the boy into the cottage, and, while having food, the boy says that he is from the nearby town Sandford and has been fleeing from his infected parents and a horde of many other infected. While explaining this, the cottage suddenly comes under attack by the infected, who have followed the boy. On their first attack, Karen is infected and then killed by Don. While Don briefly holds off the infected getting in, the group flee and get separated into two: Alice and the boy flee upstairs, while Geoff, Sally and Jacob try to escape through the cottage barn. The infected break through even as Geoff stays behind to hold them off, and he and Sally are both overrun while Jacob escapes through the barn window. At the same time, Alice follows the terrified boy upstairs to try and save him, while Don follows to try and save her. Don tries to convince Alice to flee but she refuses to leave without the boy, and when the infected corner her and the boy in a bedroom, Don abandons his wife and the boy and flees the cottage by himself. With dozens of infected in hot pursuit, Don flees across the farmland to the river dock, where Jacob is attempting to escape by a motorboat. While Don gets into the motorboat and starts it up, Jacob falls into the river and is infected by the infected who have waded into the waters after the survivors, then killed by Don with the motorboat's propeller-blades. Don then escapes downriver from the infected, emerging as the sole survivor. After the Rage outbreak destroys and wipes out Britain, over the following twenty-eight weeks, the infected die from starvation, and a US-led NATO force enters London and begins repatriating the city with Britons who escaped during the exodus of infected Britain in the outbreak. Among the military force that guard and protect London and its repatriated residents are wisecracking sniper Doyle, and his good friend helicopter pilot Flynn, as well as chief medical officer Scarlet Levy and operation leader General Stone, and Don Harris (who is caretaker of the fully-functional and fortified repatriation zone District One in London). Among the latest repatriated arrivals to London are Don and Alice's children Tammy and Andy, and the admittance of children into District One without Scarlet's authorisation shocks and worries her. During the two kids' medical inspection, Scarlet notes that Andy has the same heterochromic green and brown eye colour his mother Alice did. Andy and Tammy are reunited with their father Don, who takes them to his luxurious District One penthouse. When the kids ask about what happened to their mother, Don tells them about the infected attack on the cottage during the pandemic, but lies that he saw the infected kill Alice. The following night, Andy has a nightmare of Alice tearing her face off as Andy fears he'll forget his mother's face; so the next morning, Tammy decies to sneak out of District One with Andy to get a picture of Alice from their old home, though Doyle notices the two sneak out and alerts Flynn. In the ruined, unoccupied area of London, after taking a motorbike from an abandoned pizzeria, Tammy uses it to drive herself and Andy across an empty London to their old home, where the siblings grab a picture of Andy and Alice together and stay to collect their other lost old belongings at the house. While exploring the old Harris home alone, a shocked Andy finds Alice living in one of the rooms, physically and mentally dishevelled from her isolation but otherwise alive. The reunion is cut short when the US military, having been sent to bring Tammy and Andy back to District One, arrive and take them and Alice back to the green zone, where Alice is separated from the kids and the three are detained. During medical inspection of Alice, Scarlet is about to do a blood test and is trying to ask Alice how she stayed alive out in the post-outbreak country, when she notices an old bite scar on Alice's arm and fears Alice may be infected. Meanwhile, Don goes to a detained Tammy and Andy to take them home, but the kids are furious with their father for lying to them about their mother's fate and demand to know the truth about what really happened. Guilty over abandoning his wife, Don leaves and slips past the military security to go to Alice in the isolation room. As Don sneaks in to see Alice, Scarlet's tests on Alice's blood confirm that she is infected with the Rage virus, but is not suffering any of the virus' symptoms due to a natural immunity caused by a genetic abnormality - making Alice an asymptomatic carrier who is herself immune to the virus' symptoms, but still carries the virus and can pass it on to others. Scarlet wants to keep Alice alive for more tests in hopes of finding a key to immunisation against the Rage virus from Alice's blood, but Stone wants to have Alice killed to ensure she can't cause another outbreak of infection. In the isolation room, Don begs Alice to forgive him for abandoning her, which she seemingly does. However, Don and Alice then kiss, causing the Rage in Alice's saliva to infect Don. The infected Don brutally beats Alice to death, before escaping into District One, attacking and infecting or killing anyone he comes across. Upon learning infection is spreading, Stone and the other generals move to a safety bunker and execute a District One lockdown called Code Red. As the Rage virus spreads and chaos takes hold, when the spread reaches the detainment area where Tammy and Andy are, Scarlet comes and rescues the kids and tries to get them evacuated to safety as top-priority figures. However, in the chaos, Andy gets separated from Scarlet and Tammy and is herded with District One's other civilians into a safe room garage where the soldiers lock them all inside as the green zone's power cuts out. As District One's military forces mobilise against the outbreak, in the garage where Andy and the civilians are locked in, the infected Don breaks into the garage as a horrified Andy watches and attacks the civilians, causing the infection to massively and virulently spread among the civilians there in a domino effect and quickly infecting dozens - hundreds. In the panic, the civilians break out of the garage and flee into the streets, while Andy escapes from the infected through the ventilation systems. In the streets of District One, Doyle and the other rooftop snipers are initially ordered to shoot only infected, but as the infection continues to spread and it becomes harder to tell the infected from uninfected, they're ordered to kill everyone in sight. Andy escapes from the chaos and infected into a warehouse where other survivors are holed up as the military massacre everyone, while Doyle - unable to comply with kill-all order - abandons his post and joins the survivors in the warehouse. There, Andy reunites with Scarlet and Tammy and sadly informs his sister of how their father is one of the infected, and Doyle offers the kids, Scarlet and three other survivors there to escape the chaotic green zone with him before the military inevitably exterminates them with the infected. Doyle subsequently leads the group through the empty streets towards the District One perimeter, trying to fight off snipers shooting at them along the way although two of the three other survivors are killed along the way. Just as the Air Cavalry arrive to firebomb District One, Doyle, Andy, Scarlet, Tammy and Sam (the remaining other survivor) escape over the District One perimeter just as the green zone is firebombed and destroyed and thousands there killed. The generals watch District One burn from in their bunker, but Stone also sees that a large number of infected have survived the firebombing and are escaping into London. As dawn arrives, Doyle and the other four survivors travel across an empty and dilapidated London to Regent's Park to be airlifted to safety by Flynn when he comes to Doyle. As Scarlet and Doyle discuss how they ended up turning against the military and how Scarlet saved Tammy and Andy because she believes they may have inherited their mother's immunity to the symptoms of the Rage virus, Tammy and Andy think about all that has happened, and Tammy admis she doesn't believe Alice has survived this time. Flynn warns Doyle over the radio of the surviving infected loose in London, and a large horde of the infected then arrive at Regent's Park as Flynn flies to the Park for Doyle by helicopter. When Flynn sees Doyle has rescued civilians, he refuses to take them with them to safety, especially when Doyle wants Flynn to take them across the English Channel to safety in Europe. As the infected attack, Flynn is forced to leave when Sam grabs onto his helicopter in a panic, though not before Flynn mows a majority of the attacking infected to shreds using his helicopter's rotor blades. Doyle, Scarlet, Andy and Tammy flee back into London from the remaining infected, and Flynn instructs Don over the radio to abandon the others and meet Flynn at Wembley Stadium for pickup. When the military begin pumping nerve gas into London, Doyle, Scarlet and the Harris siblings take refuge from the gas in a van as the gas kills off the infected pursuing them. After the gas has killed the infected, when Doyle sees soldiers armed with flamethrowers approaching, he goes out to push the car by jump-starting, but is killed in the process when the soldiers see and incinerate him with their flamethrowers. Scarlet tries to avoid the military as she drives Tammy and Andy through London, until an air attack forces the trio to abandon the van and flee into the London Underground. There, Scarlet tries to guide Tammy and Andy through the dark Underground with Doyle's rifle's night-vision scope. However, while guiding the siblings down an escalator, the three get separated when Andy and Tammy fall down the stairs. Scarlet manages to find Tammy, but the former is just afterwards attacked and beaten to death by an infected. Elsewhere in the Underground, Andy wanders out onto a dark platform, where the infected that killed Scarlet comes across and attacks him. Tammy then arrives, armed with the rifle, as the infected bites Andy to her horror. When Tammy catches the infected's attention, she sees to her horror that it's Don. The infected Don then attacks Tammy, forcing her to shoot and kill her father. Just afterwards, a bitten Andy flees from Tammy into a dark tunnel as Tammy follows him. When the Rage virus doesn't take Andy over, Tammy looks at Andy and sees his left eye is turning bloodshot just as Alice's was, showing that Andy has indeed inherited their mother's immunity and become a carrier of the virus. Andy and Tammy subsequently head out of the Underground together and go to Wembley Stadium, where they find Flynn waiting with his helicopter for Doyle. When Flynn learns that Andy and Tammy are the only survivors and Doyle is dead, he reluctantly decides to airlift the two kids to safety as Doyle had asked of him. Flynn airlifts Andy and Tammy in his helicopter across London and out of infected Britain across the Channel, towards Europe. Twenty-eight days later, Flynn's helicopter is empty and abandoned somewhere in France with someone calling for help over the chopper's radio. A horde of infected are then shown running out of a Metro exit in Paris towards the Eiffel Tower, revealing that the Rage virus has now spread to mainland Europe.