Later in the film we are treated to a skintastic shower scene where water cascades down his back and bottom. The fact, however, is hardly surprising if one considers the immense body of films that comprise the science fiction genre (the Internet Movie Database search. We also get a glimpse at his backyard while he searches for something to cover himself with. The camera stays with him in all his glory as he stumbles around the operating room, his skin shillelagh swinging freely. We get a good look at his post-op python and surprisingly supple legs.
While scientists had designed the 'Rage' virus as a way of.
About ten minutes into the film, Murphy’s Jim wakes up from his coma COMPLETELY NAKED. In this 2002 post-apocalyptic horror film directed by Danny Boyle and written by novelist-turned screenwriter Alex Garland, a literal hate plague begins taking over Great Britain after animal rights activists set loose an infected chimp in a lab at Cambridge University. We do get treated to a view of Cillian Murphy, which while it doesn’t make a lot of sense to the story, will not infect anyone with rage. What doesn’t follow is a lot of gratuitous zombie booty. What follows is a story of dealing with the end of life as we know it.
He wanders into an empty London, has the bad luck to stumble into a church that has been housing a group of the rage-infected and while trying to escape the fastest zombie/monsters ever, is rescued by a small group of survivors. 28 days later we meet Jim ( Cillian Murphy) who wakes up from a coma in a deserted hospital. A chimp bites one of the activists who then proceeds to infect the rest of the group, leading to widespread skinfection. That’s how things begin to quickly unravel in “28 Days Later”. Why can’t animal activists ever listen when a scientist tells them not to unleash the chimps that have been infected with a highly contagious virus that results in unbridled rage? If they did, we wouldn’t have a movie.