![]() Once a person is exposed to the virus (transmitted through any bodily fluid) he or she immediately flies into a blood-spewing, rabid rage, biting, clawing, chewing and gouging anyone nearby. And the only hope for humanity is to get Andy and his genes (he’s probably resistant too) safely to a place where doctors can develop a vaccine. Seeing as how this is a horror film, it soon becomes clear that she’s the one who restarts the epidemic. Alice has been bitten, but it seems that she has a rare genetic ability to resist the virus’s rages. The want to find keepsakes and pictures of Mom. The kids sneak out, slip past the military containment and leave the safety of the island to journey back to their old house. But he hopes that they can put it behind them and be a happy family. He has found his way to a position of authority and oversees the infrastructure of the “green zone.” When Don’s kids, Andy and Tammy, arrive (they were in a refugee camp in Spain) he explains to them how their mom was killed. It just so happens that Don is on the island now, too. People are allowed back into a place called Dog’s Island. Army has been called in to help clean out the dead and rotting, and take control of the repopulation effort. Everyone apparently dies except for Don, who leaves his wife, Alice, behind in an act of cowardice. ![]() The sequel starts with a group of survivors who are hunkered down in a boarded-up cottage during the siege. Their actions unleashed a rage-inducing virus upon the world. This particular British zombie mess started in 28 Days Later when animal-rights activists-more concerned about the forced captivity of a diseased monkey than with the wellbeing of the populace of London-broke into a lab and set frothing animals free.
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