28 YEARS LATER Ending Explained: Does Cillian Murphy Appear And Is There A Post-Credits Scene? - SPOILERS

28 YEARS LATER Ending Explained: Does Cillian Murphy Appear And Is There A Post-Credits Scene? - SPOILERS

28 Years Later is finally here, and we're taking a deep dive into the movie's ending, whether Cillian Murphy reprises his role as Jim, and if there's anything worth waiting for after the credits...

By JoshWilding - Jun 19, 2025 11:06 AM EST
Filed Under: Horror
Source: Fear HQ

This article was originally published on FearHQ.com.

28 Years Later opens on the day the Rage Virus first ravaged the UK, with a young boy named Jimmy fleeing to a nearby church when the infected attack. His father, a priest, believes this is judgment day, and allows himself to be devoured as his son hides in a crypt and survives. 

The movie then jumps ahead to, you guessed it, "28 Years Later." Europe has managed to contain the virus, but the UK has been put into a permanent quarantine. The waters are patrolled by NATO military ships, and anyone left in Britain must stay there and is left to their own devices.

Much of what follows revolves around Spike (Alfie Williams) and his father, Jamie (Aaron-Taylor Johnson). Along with Spike's sick mother, Isla (Jodie Comer), they've taken refuge on Holy Island, but he and Jamie must leave her behind to travel to the mainland so Spike can kill his first infected. It's like a rite of passage. 

They encounter the military and an "Alpha" zombie, a massive infected that leads the others. Returning home, Jamie greatly exaggerates his son's success and has sex with another woman. Seeing this, a furious Spike confronts his father and sneaks his mother out of the settlement so he can get help from the demented Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes). 

Mother and son encounter a pregnant infected, who gives birth to a baby not affected by the Rage Virus. Meanwhile, Dr. Kelson confirms that Isla has terminal cancer and can do nothing to help her. He offers a painless way out, and she agrees. With that, he drugs Spike and euthanises her. 

The next day, the doctor presents Spike with his mother's skull, and the boy places it atop the pyramid of them outside. After helping Dr. Kelson escape the wrath of an Alpha, he returns home with the baby, named Isla, and leaves it outside the gates with a note. 

The boy returns to the mainland as his frantic father screams his name, to no avail. In the movie's final scene, Spike is at a campfire and confidently kills an infected (he's no longer the scared child he once was). More arrive, and it's then that an adult Jimmy (Jack O'Connell) shows up. 

He leads a cult-like group and wears his father's crucifix upside down. Congratulating Spike on his success in holding off the infected—the rest of the cult kill them in a bizarre, violent ritual—Jimmy offers him a place in the group as the credits roll.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple will likely explore Jimmy's story and the role of his group in what remains of the UK. Earlier in the movie, Spike and Jamie find a body hanging upside down, with the letters J-I-M-M-Y carved into its chest, so they're clearly a twisted bunch whose motivations, thus far, aren't clear.

With this new trilogy, filmmaker Danny Boyle appears to be setting out to explore what becomes of humanity while facing the infected, and how it changes them into monsters, along the way. 

28 Years Later doesn't have a post-credits scene, so we'll have to wait and see what filmmaker Nia DaCosta does with The Bone Temple, and how her follow-up continues Spike's story (and ultimately sets the stage for Cillian Murphy's return as Jim, a character who doesn't appear in this opening chapter). 

28 Years Later is now playing in theaters. 

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lazlodaytona
lazlodaytona - 6/19/2025, 11:10 AM
No mention of Jodie Comer. What a crime.

She's great in everything she touches.
Skestra
Skestra - 6/19/2025, 11:33 AM
@lazlodaytona - Jodie Comer is in this movie? Damn, now I have to go see it. Thanks for the heads up!
Trigeryen
Trigeryen - 6/19/2025, 11:42 AM
@lazlodaytona - Her name is in the article.
lazlodaytona
lazlodaytona - 6/19/2025, 12:03 PM
@Skestra - yeah. She's an epic, award-winning actress. And very kind on top of that.
lazlodaytona
lazlodaytona - 6/19/2025, 12:04 PM
@Trigeryen - but the actual article doesn't mention her name or what character she is playing.....
SuperiorHeckler
SuperiorHeckler - 6/19/2025, 11:48 AM
"...anyone left in Britain must stay there and is left to their own devices"

OK. It may very well be addressed in the movie itself but, the concept that the REST OF THE WORLD wouldn't be air-dropping a constant flow of supplies (food, medicine, technology etc) but instead simply leave the surviving populace to devolve into barbarism is simply too much even for the suspension-of-disbelief to compensate for. 🤨
SonOfAGif
SonOfAGif - 6/19/2025, 11:53 AM
@SuperiorHeckler - I would imagine that the events of 28 Weeks Later are the reason. The United States failed to restart Britain and due to the carpet bombings and the spread to France, the risk was not worth it and unfortunately NATO probably voted on leaving the land to it's own devices. I would imagine sending supplies would just expose survivors to infected and the military being indirectly involved in more deaths.
SuperiorHeckler
SuperiorHeckler - 6/19/2025, 12:01 PM
@SonOfAGif - Well, at least that's an explanation. I just hope it's not a plot-hole that is left unaddressed in the script itself. But, we shall see.... 🤔
JacobsLadder
JacobsLadder - 6/19/2025, 3:59 PM
@SuperiorHeckler - The fact that the world is pretty much how it is today except for Britain just did not work for me. The soldier has a smart phone and is talking about Amazon on an island with zombies running around. I am not a fan of that. The whole baby thing was absurd. This was not a good movie.
PatsFan93
PatsFan93 - 6/19/2025, 11:28 PM
@SuperiorHeckler - It’s totally believable that the rest of the world would do nothing. The world watches suffering in other places and does nothing all the time. Gaza is a good example of this happening right now, as are the Sudan and South Sudan.
SonOfAGif
SonOfAGif - 6/19/2025, 11:51 AM
So 28 Years Later is the continuation of what came before but will be the beginning of its own trilogy ? Am I understanding that right?
lazlodaytona
lazlodaytona - 6/19/2025, 12:07 PM
@SonOfAGif - you are correct. Except they don't have the money for the 3rd film yet. They filmed this one and the next one simultaneously .... but, if the films don't make what they need the 3rd one won't ever get made.
bobevanz
bobevanz - 6/19/2025, 12:07 PM
Going to see it tonight in Dolby! Woo hoo!
AllsGood
AllsGood - 6/19/2025, 12:10 PM
@bobevanz - The Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score looks like this movie is being Reviewed Bomb. Lot of 1 Stars.
AllsGood
AllsGood - 6/19/2025, 12:09 PM
The Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score continues to be less positive than the Critics.

I have not seen 28 Years Later and really didn't like the second. The first movie one was great.

Jun 19, 2025

As massive 28 days later fan this felt more like a coming of age story with 28 days elements thrown in at no point was the infected scary and at times the movie felt slow for what the trailer showed as an intense return to infected mainland UK it didn't deliver to what I was hoping for it was still a good movie just not what I or any of my friends were expecting from the trailer

I honestly think those 5 stars reviews from top reviewers are bought. I walked out, after completely unrelatable acting and implausible scenarios. really really bad movie.. turns out I made the right choice, apparently it did not get better afterwards... And ended with a plunk.. sorry but this is frustratingly bad.
TheFinestSmack
TheFinestSmack - 6/19/2025, 12:30 PM
Another movie i don't need to see now.
JacobsLadder
JacobsLadder - 6/19/2025, 3:56 PM
I have no interest in seeing a sequel to this. I'm really disappointed. the trailer had my hype, but it absolutely did not live up to it. I'm kind of shocked it was the poor actually.
MarvelZombie616
MarvelZombie616 - 6/19/2025, 5:40 PM
I just saw the movie and it is bad.
I love the first two movies, but this is ass.
The Infekten not being scary anymore is the worst thing, but logic errors and stupid stuff kills it.
4/10
Wolverweeny
Wolverweeny - 6/20/2025, 10:06 AM
This plot sounds terrible. So disappointing. wtf. It just ended all excitement. Sounds absolutely meaningless and like cillian was busy or something and they had dates to film so garland wrote this super quickly. But then again. Civil war and annihilation we’re ass
KingZero
KingZero - 6/20/2025, 10:33 AM
I enjoyed it. It's pretty on the nose with some of its political leanings and commentary on contemporary Britain, and it gets into ideas of society and community for both humanity and the infected. I loved Ralph Fiennes character, and Jodie Comer was so good, human drama in a post apocalyptic nightmare. Spike is the main character though, and the story is somewhat episodic with his dad and then his mum and the different experiences he has with them. It's a coming of age movie more than horror. It's Ken Loach's Dawn of the Dead. It is an evolution of the original, largely bypassing 28 weeks, but not fully discounting it (there's a line in the preface which addresses that film's ending).
NHartMusic
NHartMusic - 6/20/2025, 12:33 PM
Kelson is not demented, that's a fundamental misunderstanding of what his role was in this movie. I saw the third act as an inversion of the first film - this time around rather than a continuous descent into hell where the most horrifying thing is men feeling emboldened to commit atrocities against women, the surprise is that there are good men out there who have compassion towards other people, specifically women.

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