BOTTOM
LINE:
The
film tries really hard to be different to the standard zombie flick,
but it just meanders along, lacking tension thanks to unconvincing
CGI. Not even Will Smith's most impressive performance to date can
raise this film above its poorer qualities.
THE GOOD:
"I Am Legend" has a
premise which will be familiar to any zombie fan; a human-created
virus wipes out most of the population on the planet. Those that
don't die are turned in to zombie-like monsters, with only a select
few immune. Enter Will Smith, the sole survivor in New York City.
He wanders the empty streets with his dog, trying to find a cure.
The story is hardly new (despite being based on an old novel) but
the filmmakers really try to instil a sense of freshness in to the
story. In some ways, seeing a New York City devoid of any life with
moss and grass growing over known landmarks is quite eerie, and
this is expertly demonstrated in the opening sequences of Will Smith
driving through the city alone. Will Smith, much the same as Tom
Hanks in "Cast Away", has to carry the film by and large
on his own and does a remarkable job of holding your attention.
He ain't the Fresh Prince here, and his performance is the stand-out
quality in the film. Through him we get a character study of what
might happen to any of us who are left alone for an extended period
of time. A touching scene where he has to kill his dog when he becomes
infected with the virus is quite effective and moving. This film
makes a decent attempt to make the zombie flick epic and vast while
telling a human story.
THE
BAD: The tension of this
film comes from the zombies - unfortunately, and for some very strange
reason, the filmmakers decided to make every zombie (and all animals
that appear apart from Will Smith's dog) computer generated. It totally
kills any believability the film would have otherwise had. And it
starts right from the beginning. Smith is hunting for deer, but the
deer (which is CG) is attacked by a CG leopard and then a CG lion
joins the party. The idea is right but it just doesn't look right.
Will Smith believes it but the audience didn't. It gets worse when
the zombies show up. At first, we see them in the shadows in a scary
scene where Smith tries not to be caught out in a dark warehouse when
searching for his dog. But when they appear for us to see, they are
completely unbelievable and draw too much attention to the fact that
they're CG. What happened to good old fashioned practical techniques
which this film really should have used given the lack of screen time
allocated to the zombies? When this element fails, the film starts
to come undone, and you start to see how there isn't really much plot,
leaving the film meandering through to the end. Smith is looking for
a cure for the virus, but there isn't anything else really happening.
He eventually meets another survivor but the story at this point starts
to introduce some preachy elements which seem out of place. Story
threads such as apparent intelligent behaviour by the zombies is introduced
but never expanded. In the end it's a shame, there a lot of good things
in the film but it ultimately can't rise above it's faults.