28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Hits Physical Media Today — And Britain Has Never Looked More Terrifying
Twenty-eight years after a weaponised virus reduced Britain to a blood-soaked wasteland, the nightmare is back — and this time it fits in your hands. 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple lands on 4K Ultra HD SteelBook, Blu-ray and DVD today, giving horror fans the chance to own one of the most audacious, divisive and genuinely disturbing films of 2026 in the format it deserves.
This is not a film that apologises for itself. Directed by Nia DaCosta and written by Alex Garland — the same pen that carved 28 Days Later into the DNA of British horror — The Bone Temple picks up exactly where the first chapter of the new trilogy left off, throwing audiences headfirst back into a broken, lawless Britain with no easing in and no hand-holding. The Rage Virus may have been here for nearly three decades, but the world it created has grown stranger, darker and more human in all the worst ways.
At the centre of it all is Dr Kelson — played by Ralph Fiennes in a performance that critics have been falling over themselves to describe as career-defining. Kelson is a man who refuses to stop believing in the possibility of connection, even when everything around him has surrendered to violence and horror. His relationship with Samson — a physically imposing Alpha infected brought to life by Chi Lewis-Parry in a performance of startling vulnerability — is the beating, broken heart of the film. These are two beings from opposite sides of an apocalypse, finding something neither of them was supposed to still have. It is the most radical thing a horror film has done in years.

Alongside Kelson’s story runs the tale of Spike, drawn into the orbit of Jimmy Crystal’s satanic cult on the mainland — a world where the infected are no longer the most dangerous thing walking the earth. That line, buried in the film’s official synopsis, is the key to understanding what DaCosta was building here. The inhumanity of the survivors can be stranger and more terrifying. In a franchise built on flesh-hungry monsters sprinting through empty London streets, that is a genuinely chilling pivot.
Jack O’Connell tears through his role with the kind of ferocious committed energy that makes you remember why he was always destined for something like this. His confrontation with Fiennes — when the film’s two worlds finally collide — is the kind of sequence that gets talked about for years.

And then there is the moment every long-term fan has been waiting for. Without spoiling what happens, John Murphy’s iconic In the House, In a Heartbeat — the piece of music burned into the memory of anyone who has ever seen 28 Days Later — returns in the finale with devastating, electrifying precision. The hairs on the back of your neck will stand up before you even fully register what you are hearing.
The numbers at the box office told one story. The film opened to just $13 million domestically — less than half of what its predecessor managed — and closed its theatrical run with a worldwide total of $58.4 million against a combined production and marketing spend pushing $130 million. By any commercial measure, a bomb.
But the audience who actually found it told a completely different story. A 92% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes. An 88% audience score. An A- CinemaScore — a grade so rare for a horror film it almost never happens. The people who saw it loved it. The problem was simply that not enough people saw it.
Today that changes. The 4K Ultra HD SteelBook edition arrives with Dolby Vision, HDR10 and a Dolby Atmos soundtrack — the kind of audio-visual package that turns a living room into a cinema. This is a film built on sound as much as vision. The squelch of infected feet. The distant howl of something wrong in the treeline. Murphy’s score pressing down on your chest. It was made for a room with the lights off and the volume up.
Whether Sony greenlights the planned third and final film in the trilogy remains to be officially confirmed — Cillian Murphy himself said it would only happen if The Bone Temple found its audience. Today, with this release, is when that audience gets a second chance to make the right call.
The Rage was never finished with us. Neither are we with it.
Own it. Turn the lights off. Turn it up loud.

DARK FRIGHTS VERDICT: One of 2026’s finest. A film that deserved better at the box office and now deserves a permanent place on your shelf.
