| Errors | Missing | Unverified | Supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 2 | 0 | 5 |
In the final scene of 28 Weeks Later, the narrative skips forward to 28 days after the events at Wembley Stadium.
The scene begins with a shot of the helicopter piloted by Flynn, which had previously rescued the children, Tammy and Andy. The helicopter is shown abandoned and grounded on a grassy field. Inside the cockpit, the radio is crackling with a distress call in French, implying that the helicopter successfully crossed the English Channel to mainland Europe.
The camera then pans away from the helicopter to reveal the surrounding landscape. As the music (John Murphy's "In the House - In a Heartbeat") intensifies, the scene shifts to the outskirts of a city. A group of the "Rage" infected are seen sprinting out of a dark tunnel, screaming and moving with their characteristic frantic speed.
The final shot is a wide aerial view showing the infected running toward the Eiffel Tower in Paris. This confirms that the virus has officially broken containment from the British Isles and has begun to spread across continental Europe, likely through Andy, who—despite appearing healthy—was a carrier of the virus like his mother.
The film ends on this bleak note, indicating a global pandemic is now inevitable.
The summary mentions the time jump but omits the specific text '28 Days Later' which appears on screen as a callback to the first film.
The summary describes the location as a 'dark tunnel' and 'outskirts', missing the specific identification of the Trocadéro Metro station.
The final scene of 28 Weeks Later begins with a title card reading "28 Days Later." We see Flynn's helicopter abandoned in a grassy field (implied to be in France). A voice on the helicopter's radio calls for help in French. The scene then cuts to a dark tunnel—the Trocadéro Metro station in central Paris—where a horde of infected sprint out and run across the plaza towards the Eiffel Tower. This confirms the virus has breached the UK and spread to mainland Europe, likely carried by Andy.