In the future, a strange fungus has changed nearly everyone into a thoughtless, flesh-eating monster. When a scientist and a teacher find a girl who seems to be immune to the fungus, they all begin a journey to save humanity.
This movie contains 31 potentially triggering events.
A dog is found abandoned inside a house. A character sets the dog loose in front of a horde of infected. The dog sprints away with the horde chasing. The movie never shows whether or not the dog escaped the horse, but he was moving much faster than the group. No dog death is shown.
The main character is injected with medical anesthetic after claiming to be unwilling to go through with a procedure that will, unknown to her, end her life.
Technically yes, after the military base is over run the survivors are on the road moving from place to place finally finding an abandoned military mobile hospital to stay in.
Spoiler: Melanie and the other children were taken to the lab facility by soldiers who would’ve found them roaming around. The children were infected with the hungry pathogen in the womb and ate their way out. We have no way of knowing at what age they were originally taken to the lab
The infected children, who generally behave normally and do not understand their condition, are kept in what is essentially a prison. They live in small cells with solid doors, receiving food through a slot. The guards hatefully refer to them as "abortions" and misgender them "it" to undermine their humanity. They often have semi-automatic weapons trained on them and are strapped into wheelchairs when removed from their cells. They are deprived of affection and not provided with toys or other stimulation outside of classroom.
No recreational or prescription drugs are used/abused. A character is injected with an anaesthetic in preparation for surgery. Another character explains that she dosed herself with an antibiotic in order to attempt to stop the spread of an infection.
The cat scene is at the 1h mark. Close your eyes as soon as you see the cat and wait about 10 seconds and you'll miss it because there's no sound.
The cat actor got paid in Dreamies and catnip.
A black cat is eaten (not fully shown on screen but you see the mass of fur and blood on the girl's face as she eats) and a dog is used as a distraction. It runs off screen and is assumed to have been killed.
A character bashes an infected in the head with a fire extinguisher, either crushing in or shearing off the crown of the head. In a later scene, one character kills an antagonist character with an aluminum baseball bat. This occurs just off-camera and we do not see the aftermath, but we see her swing the bat many times and we get a shot of the antagonist's leg twitching. The implication is that she is crushing his skull.
The characters discuss second-generation infected eating their way out of the womb of infected mothers. Prior to his death, a character states that the last time he saw his wife, she was seven months pregnant and that he had been holding out hope that she was still alive somewhere.
No traditional possession, but please be aware that this is a zombie film and that, in this case, the zombiism is caused by a parasitic plant resembling cordyceps.
The zombies often make gagging/retching sounds (accompanied by drool and spit, which could remind someone of the salivation experienced before vomiting) but there is no outright vomit.
A man spits onto his arm and rubs it across his skin in order to trigger an infected to try to attack. The same man spits later in the film when airborne particles have gotten into his mouth. The infected sometimes drool/spit.
No hospitals are depicted per se, but we see two different laboratory set-ups with operating tables, surgical equipment and trays, surgical lights, people dressed in scrubs, use of rubbing alcohol to cleanse a wound, use of a syringe to administer anaesthetic and straps to secure a character to the table. The intention is to anaesthetize the character and then perform a lethal surgery involving removal of the brain, but in both instances, the character escapes the procedure.
A character is lured into a grocery, where he is surrounded by infected in a narrow aisle. There's also an instance of the characters shutting themselves in the back of a van to escape the infected.
No one commits suicide. The nearest thing to suicide is a recently-infected character handing another character a gun and asking her to shoot him so that he will not end up a zombie. She waits until he has turned to shoot him.
While not technically stillborn, multiple children are implied to have been "born" from (ate their way out of) their infected mothers, in a sense being "already dead" when they are born because the infection is already in their brains. This is treated like a philosophical dilemma as to whether or not the children are alive or not (general consensus is that they are, and they will inherit the Earth from mankind, at least in the book)
No childbirth is depicted. There is a scene where the main character asks where infected children come form and is told that second-generation infected eat their way out of the womb of infected mothers.
However, a guard uses the phrase "frickin' abortions", which the main character delights in repeating as a sort of "bad word" several times throughout the film.