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Does Tonally Choarring, “Batsh * T” ending the whole film?

28 years laterThe long -awaited suite of director Danny Boyle and the writer Alex Garland, is now in theaters, and although the film has met a very positive reception of criticism (it is currently seated 92% on Rotten Tomatoes), it turned out to be much more a division experience for the general public.

In many ways, the film is a good follow -up of the original, with strong performance, engaging protagonists and a lot of carnage of “zombie” horrible for horror dogs. It is also a bit of a head shoemaker, with bizarre developments and developments of characters that compensate for the drama to a certain extent.

Large oscillations and daring choices are always laudable, but when they are not paid, they can completely disengage your audience.

Major spoilers follow.

Doctor Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) presenting Spike (Alfie Williams) with the freshly cleaned skull of his very deceased mother Isla (Jodie Comer) and Samson, the alpha-drank distraction well endowed running like a disturbed porn star are clearly supposed to be moments that seem to have movie rognes.

But it’s the end that really stands out as a confusing choice.

After her mother has succeeded, Alfie decides not to go home, leaving Baby Isla to her father (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to take care of while he poses in nature. When a group of infects attacks her campfire, Alfie receives unexpected help from Jimmy de Jack O’Connel – whom we met as a child in the opening scene – and his crew by Jimmy Savile Impersonator Ninjas (really), who proceeds to the infected in a scene that seems to be more at home in a film by Guy Ritchie.

The sequence is surely intended to be one of the biggest WTF moments of the year (if not the story of the horror film), and is tonedly shocking insofar as many fans have accused it of completely derailing the film.

Maybe the scene is indicative of what we can expect from the continuation of Nia Dacosta, The bone temple (The paradise prohibited), but he feels so moved here – especially since he is played almost immediately after the most powerful and devastating scene of the film.

What do you think? Was 28 years laterThe end really so bad, or are people overexagére? Place us a comment below.

According to the official synopsis, “It has been almost three decades that the rabies virus escaped a laboratory of biological weapons, and now, still in around forty mercilessly applied, some have found ways to exist in the middle of the infected. Such a group of survivors lives on a small island linked to La Main-sur-Planche by a single way of strongly defended. other survivors.

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