Daybreakers
Review
by Anthony Morris
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Daybreakers
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Resolutely
old-school in its approach to vampires (they eat people, they don't
have reflections, and they burst into flames if they try to get a sun
tan) while science-fictional in tone, Daybreakers (from the Australian Spierig brothers of Undead fame) is the kind of solid B-movie thriller that is bound to win fans worldwide. There's only one problem: it's not all that much fun. There's
plenty to admire in this grim tale of a no-so-futuristic world where
almost everyone has been turned into a vampire. The Spierig's have
clearly spent a lot of time figuring out how this world works, from
armoured and camera covered cars so they can drive in daylight to
forest fires started by vampiric animals wandering into the
sunlight. The characters are well thought-out too... Blood
scientist Edward Dalton (Ethan Hawke) is a man-turned-vampire weighed
down by the burden of having to drink blood to survive - if vampires
don't drink blood they turn into mindless monsters, which is
increasingly a problem as blood supplies are running out. Everyone’s a vampire, remember? His
boss Charles Bromley (Sam Neill) is far more comfortable with being a
vampire (he had a terminal illness when he was turned into one), so
when Dalton stumbles into the grasp of a small band of non-vampires who
just might have a cure for vampirism, it's a bit of a double-edged
sword. No vampires means no worries about lack of blood; no vampires means you don't get to live forever.
It's this rigourous approach to plotting that makes Daybreakers such a watchable film even as the relentless one-note nature of the story starts to take it's toll. Daybreakers
takes itself totally seriously from start to finish which, considering
it's about vampires milking humans for blood, does make you wish that
occasionally someone would lighten up and crack a smile. Presumably
Willem Dafoe (the car-loving redneck who comes across a cure for
vampirism) was meant to be that guy, but he turns in a sombre,
desperate performance that, while totally appropriate for his
character, isn't quite the barrel of laughs that this film occasionally
needs. The end result is a vampire film that remains solidly consistent without ever really bursting into life. ...Which seems appropriate.
3
out
of 5
Daybreakers
Australian release: 4th February,
2010
Official
Site: Daybreakers
Cast: Ethan Hawke, Willem Dafoe, Sam Neill, Vince Colosimo, Jay Laga'aia, Claudia Karvan, Isabel Lucas
Director: Michael Spierig, Peter Spierig
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