Film Review
The first screen version of Richard Matheson's classic sci-fi novel
I Am Legend is an effective
rendering of a modern vampire tale but its impact is greatly diminished
by some poor design and weak direction that fail to disguise its
lamentably low budget. To save on cost, the film was shot in Rome
with a predominantly Italian cast and crew and badly dubbed into
English. Although Vincent Price turns in a surprisingly good
performance (cast against type in a sympathetic and heroic role) the
actor is visibly miscast and struggles to convey the abject desolation
of someone who realises he is, literally, the last man on Earth.
Price may be miscast but his star presence is badly needed as the rest
of the cast is made up of largely unknown Italian actors who look as if
they are doomed to spend their entire careers in B-movie schlock such
as this.
Like its subsequent, more expensive remake
The Omega Man (1971), the film
is most impressive in its opening third. Some stark and chilling
visuals provide a powerful testimony of a society that has abruptly
collapsed, and the nocturnal sequences in which the zombie-like
vampires attack the hero's home have a nightmarish, almost iconic
quality, which director George A. Romero would later appropriate for
his landmark zombie film,
Night of the Living Dead
(1968). Things go badly awry with an extended flashback that
makes up the film's middle portion, a descent into tedious melodrama
that pointlessly holds things up. Things do not improve when the
narrative returns to the present and a slightly botched denouement ends
up massively short-changing Matheson's sophisticated horror
story. Vincent Price's presence ensured that
The Last Man on Earth would not be
forgotten but, poorly written and ineptly packaged, it is a mere shadow
of what it might have been. No wonder Matheson was quick to
disown it.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
In 1968, Robert Morgan is the last human being left on Earth.
Three years ago, humanity began to succumb to a plague that transformed
people into zombie-like vampires. Morgan lost his wife and his
daughter to this mysterious and incurable illness and now ekes out a
wretched existence in a hostile world. By day, he roams the city,
disposing of any vampires he comes across. By night, he
barricades himself in his house as the walking dead come hammering on
his door, intent on killing him. One day, Robert encounters a
woman named Ruth who appears not to have been touched by the
plague. He soon discovers that she is a mutant, one of a small
band of survivors who have developed a vaccine to keep the disease at
bay. Amongst Ruth's people Robert is a legend, one that is too
dangerous to go on living...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.