An early contender for best movie of 2026
Digest more
Major spoilers below for anyone who hasn’t yet watched 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, so be warned, and don’t make Sir Lord Jimmy Crystal angry. A large majority of horror features rely on two genre tenets: tension and body count.
The filmmaker discusses her career mining wildly different IP, zombie semantics and capturing one of Ralph Fiennes' wildest performances to date: "It’s a beautiful example of collaboration in film and an actor just willing to really fucking rock it.
In a new interview with IGN, the actor, who GamesRadar+ named best newcomer of 2025, flagged that he's been playing a lot of Dead Space recently – and that he'd be keen to star in a film adaptation one day. Hardly a far-fetched dream these days, given how Hollywood is leaning into video games as a serious source of inspiration...
Clint Gage of IGN gives 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple a “Great” 8 out of 10, calling it “easily” the most gruesome installment of the franchise, which is saying quite a lot. The sequel is “surprisingly funny, exceptionally brutal,” Gage says, writing:
Ralph Fiennes and Jack O’Connell face off in a smart, terrifying sequel with a killer soundtrack and gnarly violence
"28 Years Later" was led by Spike (Alfie Williams), a 12-year-old boy venturing into the wilds of post-apocalyptic, zombie-filled UK. Spike is still around in "The Bone Temple," but actor Ralph Fiennes rises to be the standout star of this film.