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Fire at Will!'s Review

Created Jan 10, 2009 04:44AM PST • Edited Jan 10, 2009 04:46AM PST

  1. Quality
  2. Very Good 3.5

    Another Will Smith film that gets to its halfway point and loses its promise, I Am Legend nevertheless is a fantastic piece of filmmaking, and a real presentation of Smith’s acting skills.

  3. Very Good 3.5

    Will Smith is everything with this movie – without his performance, it would crash and burn. Introducing other survivors only makes his performance better.

  4. Male Stars Really Great 4.5

    Smith is the last man on earth, and as such, his performance is somewhat more difficult than usual. The actor is finally and consistently presenting himself (along with another two of his films ‘The Pursuit of Happyness’ and ‘Seven Pounds’) as a mature and serious actor – he doesn’t wisecrack, there’s no rap track to accompany him. And Smith is a seriously good actor when he wants to be – his performance as Robert Neville is incredibly strong, the last man alive despondently going about survival, the city of New York his playground.

  5. Female Stars Good 3.0

    Alice Braga plays another survivor, who, along with a small child she had found, tracks Neville down, and she does well with what she has as someone who is trying to reconnect – she is desperately searching for another human, and in Neville she finds one.

  6. Female Costars Good 3.0

    Score adjusted.

  7. Male Costars Good 3.0

    The only real co-star other than the dog could be said to be Mike Patton of the band Faith No More, who voices the CGI humans, and it’s an achievement to be able to make such disturbing noises as he does. His vocal performance gives the otherwise soulless human infected with a sense of evil – an evil with its roots in humanity.

  8. Very Good 3.5

    The film looks, sounds and is presented fantastically well by director Francis Lawrence, the particularly significant highlight being the empty New York in which the film takes place. The only issue is the point at which the infected are presented and when the other survivors appear – Smith has done so well up until this point that it’s a shame for the film to suddenly become ‘Will Smith and friends against the evil infected’ rather than just Smith and his aggressors.

  9. Direction Very Good 3.5

    Lawrence manages to craft a quite interesting update of the Richard Matheson novel here – his master-stroke is managing to convincingly empty New York City (more specifically Manhattan) and present it as a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Along with his direction of Smith’s total solitude and the visual effects on display, Lawrence has succeeded in making a particularly morose and dark blockbuster movie.

  10. Play Very Good 3.5

    What little dialogue is present is reflective of Neville’s solitude – memorable exchanges with his dog, the mannequins he strategically places to keep him sane and the eventual conversation with the two other survivors are great indicators of the psychological toll the events have taken on him.

  11. Music Good 3.0

    The music is mostly absent, only really appearing to accentuate the tension. And this is necessary – the deserted Manhattan is even more ominous when coupled with silence.

  12. Visuals Very Good 3.5

    The practical and technological prowess exerted to make Manhattan appear so empty must be commended here – it really is incredibly convincing viewing the empty Times Square, or the many deserted streets of NYC that Neville traverses. The whole film is bathed in a dark golden light, and the resurgence of the wildlife amongst the skyscrapers presents the idea that nature is slowly claiming back what it used to cover. The only disappointment is the CGI used on the infected – if this had not been used then the film would most likely have been far more acclaimed, but as it is, the effects used are far too plastic, too fake to be taken seriously.

  13. Content
  14. Risqué 2.2

    There is a lot of tension, sometimes quite unbearably so. The swearing is at a minimum though, as is the violence. The night-dwellers (I don’t know what else to call them) are quite grotesque, but I can imagine would be worse if they were practical effects, and not CGI.

  15. Sex Innocent 1.0
  16. Violence Brutal 3.5
  17. Rudeness Salty 2.1
  18. Fantasy 5.0

    Disease killing off a lot of people worldwide, leaving some immune? That’s realistic. Having a certain quotient of the survivors turn into adrenaline-fuelled, bald-headed animals? Fantasy at its best.

  19. Circumstantial Fantasy 5.0
  20. Biological Fantasy 5.0
  21. Physical Fantasy 5.0

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Dec 29, 2007 8:52PM
Atiras

I heard mixed reviews on this one, so I lowered my expectations. I was, however, pleasantly surprised that it turned out so well. Its good as a film if you don’t compare it to the novel and the other film adaptations. I was a little afraid that this would turn out like Cast Away but this one was a lot better.