28 Years Later: The Bone Temple features organic diversity in its post-apocalyptic British setting, with a mostly white cast reflecting the location and survivor demographics, including minor roles for Black actor Chi Lewis-Parry as the alpha infected Samson and Ghazi Al Ruffai as a gang member, without any race- or gender-swapping from the source material or forced inclusions that clash with the narrative. Directed by Nia DaCosta and written by Alex Garland, the film focuses on universal horror themes like human savagery versus empathy, the nature of evil through a sadistic cult led by Jimmy Crystal (Jack O'Connell), and compassion in chaos via Dr. Kelson's (Ralph Fiennes) interactions, delivering brutal, inventive zombie action and philosophical depth without lectures on systemic racism, patriarchy, or identity politics. No prominent LGBTQ+ representation or social justice messaging drives the plot; the controversial Jimmy Savile-inspired cult leader satirizes charismatic evil universally. Critically acclaimed (93% Rotten Tomatoes) with strong audience scores (88%), it faced no significant backlash labeling it 'woke,' with isolated fringe complaints drowned out by praise for entertainment value, unhinged gore, and emotional payoff. This sequel prioritizes thrilling storytelling and franchise lore over ideological intrusions, maintaining the series' gritty, apolitical entertainment focus.