28 Years Later: The Bone Temple 28 Years Later The Bone Temple: Worth Adding to Your Collection
Full Video Review
A solid Rage Virus continuation with strong atmosphere and a dependable Blu-ray presentation.
Izola reviews 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple on Blu-ray, covering story, performances, audio, video quality, and whether it’s worth adding to your collection.
28 Years: Later The Bone Temple continues the Rage Virus saga with a direct follow-up to 28 Years Later. In this FlickDirect review, Izola breaks down the story, performances, atmosphere, Blu-ray video transfer, DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track, and bonus features.
The film delivers strong atmosphere, solid performances, a creepy cult storyline, and tense post-apocalyptic horror, even if the pacing drags in the middle and the ending leaves more questions than answers. Fans of 28 Days Later and the larger franchise should find enough here to make the Blu-ray worth considering.
On disc, the Blu-ray offers a clean 1080p transfer with strong close-up detail, effective shadow work, and a solid DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 mix. The bonus features include behind-the-scenes material, commentary, deleted scenes, and a look at the evolution of the Rage Virus.
Collector note: Artwork and packaging may vary by region.
ABOUT 28 YEARS LATER: THE BONE TEMPLE
Decades after the brutal rage-virus outbreak, Dr. Ian Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) has created a memorial of shrines made from bones, honoring both the infected and the dead. Spike (Alfie Williams), driven by his dying mother's wishes, embarks on a perilous journey from his sanctuary to the mainland to find Kelson—only to uncover a fractured civilization where hope and horror are intertwined.
Amid crumbling ruins, Spike finds unexpectedly fierce allies—and even fiercer enemies. The formidable “Jimmies,” led by the charismatic and cultish Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O'Connell), threaten to tip the balance toward chaos. As Spike confronts the infected, the faithless, and the bone temple itself, he'll discover that humanity—and its stories of survival—are more powerful than death.
Directed By: Nia DaCosta
MPAA Rating: R
Genre: Horror
Running Time: 109 minutes
Distributed By: Sony Pictures
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is © Sony Pictures. All Rights Reserved.


