

When a guilty Donald goes into confront her, Alice deliberately bites and infects him. Back in the Green Zone, the medical specialist Scarlet is fascinated to discover that Alice is infected but has a natural immunity to Rage. They break out of the Green Zone and return to the house seeking mementoes of her – only to find her still alive.

He tells them how he saw their mother devoured and there was nothing he could do to save her. Donald has been appointed in charge of power and electricity and is rejoined by his teenage daughter Tammy and young son Andy. 28 weeks later, the Rage zombies have died out from starvation and a NATO force has reoccupied England and created a Green Zone around London where surviving civilians are being repatriated.

As the zombies break in, Donald flees, deliberately abandoning Alice. Their safety is interrupted by a young boy fleeing from a horde of zombies. Thirdly, director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo has always been a big fan of the 'ghostly' quality day-for-night shooting has, and he felt it would create the perfect sense of unease for the film.During the outbreak of Rage virus across England, Donald Harris and his wife Alice take refuge in a cottage with several others. By shooting during the day time however, there are few lights on in most buildings anyway, and as such, when the day-for-night treatment is applied to the film stock, everything in the image darkens equally, thus giving the impression that all of the buildings are in total darkness. However, if one were to actually shoot at night time in London, this would be impossible to capture photo-realistically and would hence involve complex post-production work removing all of the lights. Secondly, because there is supposed to be a total shut down of all power in London, hence every building must appear light-less. Firstly, because the filmmakers weren't allowed to use Mackintosh Muggleton (Andy) at night time. The scenes were shot day-for-night for three reasons. The more logical tactic would have simply to have ordered everybody in their dwellings to lock themselves inside of themĪll of the night scenes involving Andy, Tammy, Scarlet, Doyle and Sam's journey across London to escape the bombs were shot day-for-night using a new technique created specifically for the film by director of photography Enrique Chediak. Nor did it make any sense to herd the entire British population into massive unguarded huge shelters as this would have been very time consuming. There should have been pre-positioned lighting units everywhere in the city to flood all the streets with light so the soldiers could acquire their targets more easily. What should have happened was the exact opposite. By going into a blackout condition, all I did was basically blind all of the security forces because none of the soldiers could see anything, no movement of the infected or targets. This tactic makes absolutely no sense and would only really be employed in case of an air attack by bombers. After Don causes the infection to spread rapidly and the infected are starting to run wild on the streets, General Stone orders the troops to initiate the alert to contain the infected, and which one tactic was to have the safe zone in that part of London to go into a literal blackout condition.
