

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple
Fear is the new faith.
Overview
Dr. Kelson finds himself in a shocking new relationship - with consequences that could change the world as they know it - and Spike's encounter with Jimmy Crystal becomes a nightmare he can't escape.
User Reviews
Manuel São Bento
January 15, 2026
Full review: https://movieswetextedabout.com/28-years-later-the-bone-temple-movie-review-how-ralph-fiennes-turns-the-grotesque-into-high-art/ Rating: A- "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple asserts itself as an audacious triumph that revitalizes the saga with unexpected ferocity, balancing the franchise’s most repulsive graphic horror with biting narrative intelligence. Elevated by magnetic performances — especially by Ralph Fiennes — and dazzling cinematography that transforms the grotesque into art, the movie is both a spectacle of blood and a deep thematic study on memory and survival that leaves us with the unsettling certainty that, in this new world, evolution is the only alternative to extinction."
Rachills + Thrills
January 18, 2026
I don’t often walk out of a theater with the only thought on my mind being ‘that was so good’ but here we are. I struggle to care for the messages in most zombie flicks (I know, the rage is different than the undead), but this blossoms into something so rich and so nuanced that I was smiling from ear to ear as we dive into how humans cope with the world and how their perspectives manhandle their approach to survival. It’s fucking nuts, it’s a fucking treat. Thank you Nia DaCosta, thank you Ralph Fiennes, thank you Jack O’Connell. HOWZAT?!
Leno
January 18, 2026
The original 28 days later is one of my favorite movies ever so I literally counted the days for painful 18 years since 28 weeks later until the new trilogy was finally announced. The first 28 years later was a bit of disappointment for me, but the bone temple is all I waited for those many years! The movie follows 2 core of characters where they left off the last movie. Spike now is forced to do increasingly insane things as part of Jimmy's satanic cult, while doctor Ian experiments with the Alpha zombie after he displays some reasoning capabilities like a stronger version of "Bub" from the "Day of the dead". The characters paths eventually intersect leading to deadly consequences in this movie packed with action. Impeccable acting, graphic but not exaggerated gore, realistic yet surprising plot, and iconic scenes make this one of the best ever zombie movies, tho this one focuses a bit more on the damage people can cause rather than the zombies. The year is just starting but I have already watched the best movie of 2026, And what a way to end this movie, can't wait for the third installment. What a time to be alive! Ps: make sure you watched the previous 28 years later movie and at least the last 20min of 28 days later.
Sejian
January 20, 2026
"That was some gory !@#$. Holy !@#$! Is it safe to open me eyes?" **SPOILERS AHEAD!** I was hesitant to watch this after the previous installment, but I saw Ralph Fiennes in the promo images and figured "I like Ralph Fiennes, and I liked the doctor from the previous movie, so why not?" The best three things from "28 Years Later" take center stage in "The Bone Temple": The doctor, the "Howzats", and "Samson's" big !@#$in' d***. For a hot minute, I thougth the dad had returned, but thank !@#$, no he didn't. I don't need to ever return to dad, thanks. There's a lot of gore. Brace yourself. Also, there are no !@#$in' "Boots" or medieval bull!@#$ to be seen or heard! Cheers! I'm looking forward to the next one. P.S. Where it comes to representation... I want to say that I feel like Satanism gets the short end of the stick constantly, but I have to remind myself that there are, in fact, lunatics who do worship devils and call themselves Satanists, the same way that there are lunatics who convince themselves that their devil is a benevolent god, and call themselves Christians, Catholics, and Muslims, etc. Is all the !@#$in' same, innit? Look around, and try to convince me it ain't.
MovieGuys
January 20, 2026
I'm not quite as taken with "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple" as I was with its immediate predecessor. The considered, intelligent, insightful aspects of this film, embodied in Ralph Fiennes's Dr Ian Kelson character, are undermined with the re-introduction of the stabby satanic fashion refugees from the closing scenes of the last film. I was critical of their rather ridiculous Clockwork Orange-at-the-end-of-the-world-style antics and remain so. Their oftentimes moronic presence drags this film down, reducing it to an often grotesque farce on more than one occasion. The "we're all Jimmy" line is reminiscent of "we're Negan" from The Walking Dead, minus the gritty gravitas. In summary, not a bad film but not a great one either. Sophisticated elements, diluted to often mild stupidity by the almost cartoonish presence, of the oddball fashion extras, with a satanic infatuation.
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