I Am Legend (Warning: Contains Spoilers!)
Posted by isecore on December 26th, 2007
Action/Horror/Drama from 2007 featuring Will Smith.
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Robert Neville (Smith) is the last survivor of a man-made plague causing horrible mutations. The plague started off as a well-intended genetic cure for cancer, but for unknown reasons instead started causing mutations and killing 90% of the human race. The survivors of the plague was rewarded with extreme mutations, and turned into violent creatures needing to feed on the minority of humans who were immune to the plague. Robert Neville is the last survivor of these naturally immune humans, and he’s desperately working on finding a cure for the infected before it’s too late…
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Man, I was so badly looking forward to this movie.
I’ve read the original novel by Richard Matheson a few times, and it quickly developed into one of my many favourite books. Essentially it was about how Robert Neville was the last survivor of a plague which turned everyone else into creatures essentially resembling vampires - they needed blood for sustenance and were vulnerable to sunlight. The two major things that fascinated me with the novel was partly the main protagonist (Neville) and his struggle to survive and remain sane in a world gone mad, but also the concept of scientifically explaining the symptoms of vampirism as a disease instead of something supernatural.
I’ve seen both the previous attempts at turning this book into a movie, and neither of them really caught me. I’ve never been much of a Charlton Heston-fan even though I accepted him in Planet of the Apes and thus felt a large ambivalence to The Omega Man, but the older adaptation (The Last Man On Earth) is, in my opinion, pure crap.
So when the teasers started to appear last year I felt that, yeah, this seemed like a much more worthy adaptation. With a proper budget, proper special effects and that nice post-apocalyptic feel that was sorely missed in the previous incarnations. Sure, I felt a little iffy at Will Smith as Robert Neville, but the fresh prince has actually developed into a fairly capable actor.
The teasers and trailers also gave the impression that they were sticking to the story and world established in the novel. Most obviously I felt that this was indicated by not altering the title from “I Am Legend” into something other like the previous adaptations.
But, unfortunately, I was wrong.
Before I continue, let me make clear that I don’t think this is a bad movie. Quite the opposite, it’s probably an enjoyable zombie-style flick to anyone who isn’t a fan of the book. I do think however that fans of the novel will be disappointed - just like I was.
The movie starts off quite promising. Visually it’s very impressive, and the mood is effectively set for the viewer. Smith is quite capable as Neville, trying to maintain his sanity and survive all the while trying to figure out the virus. He isn’t the usual Smith-character, he’s not fast-talking or cool, and there’s definitely a few cogs missing in the brain department. I was impressed by it.
Leave it to Hollywood to mess this up though, and they sure did. See, I really, really liked the novel. What really rubs my rhubarb with this movie is that after a while it descends into the usual Hollywood-happy ending. Also, most annoyingly, it cuts out large parts of the story of the novel, and messes up the reason why Neville is a legend, and to whom he is a legend.
In the novel, the infected were for all intents and purposes, vampires. They slept at day and awoke at night needing blood. During the day, Neville would go from house to house and kill the sleeping infected. However, what Neville doesn’t know until later is that there exist infected who have managed to keep most of the disease at bay. They still have the symptoms (vulnerability to sunlight, garlic, etc) but haven’t quite become the horribly disfigured and violent creatures that other have become. They have in fact established communities, and try to live normal lives. Neville doesn’t know this, and indiscriminately kills every sleeping person who’s been infected. This is what makes him a legend to these half-infected people, since he can walk in daylight and kill them while they sleep.
This is completely absent in the movie, and it seems that Neville instead spends his days working on finding a cure for the virus, as well as searching for other survivors and food. Any encounter with the infected is purely accident, apart from one which he captures to try his proposed cure on. The infected are instead violent zombie-style creatures who stay out of sunlight and only come out at night trying to find something to feed off of. Neville boards his house shut during the night, and stays out of trouble by not showing any activity then.
The movie descends even further into Hollywood-happy endings. After a while a girl and a young boy show up, claiming to be survivors of the disease, and that there is a community of survivors in Vermont. They want to go there, and bring Neville with them. Long story short, he dies and they take the cure (which all of a sudden miraculously worked) with them, tying up the movie in a nice Hollywood happy ending rather than the bleak and dark ending of the novel.
This really disturbed me. The ending was just too positive for me, and the girl and young boy serve as nothing except fodder to that stereotyped ending.
So, if you haven’t read the book then this will probably be a pretty decent action/horror-movie, with liberal doses of drama and good acting from Will Smith. But for me, I felt slightly cheated.

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December 27th, 2007 at 03:43
I agree. While I have not actually read the novel this film seemed kind of short. I enjoyed Omega man more than this as it at least gave a little more story. I also liked Will Smiths acting and the mood in the beginning of the movie, but it kind of kept me waiting for something that never came. Like they had cut out something really important in the middle of the movie to save time and then added a cookiecut happy ending. The film is still worth seeing though, especially if you have not seen Omega man or read the Novel.