

Yes, she has doubtless heard his nonstop taped voice on all AM frequencies, asking to be contacted by any other survivors. I doubt that she and the boy would venture through Manhattan to get there. Neville doubts that such a colony exists. He takes them home, and she explains they are trying to get to a colony of survivors in Vermont. He is saved (I'm not sure how) by a young woman named Anna ( Alice Braga), who is traveling with a boy named Ethan ( Charlie Tahan).

There is, however, an event which breaks his spirit and he cracks up - driving out at night to try to mow down as many zombies with his car as he can before they kill him. Given its setup, "I Am Legend" is well-constructed to involve us with Dr. And how, I always wonder, do human beings in all their infinite shapes and sizes mutate into identical pale zombies with infinite speed and strength? Fair enough, although he faces a future of despair, no matter how long his cans of Spam and Dinty Moore beef stew hold out dogs don't live forever. If Neville firmly believes he is the last healthy man alive, who is the vaccine for? Only himself, I guess. In "I Am Legend," the situation raises questions of logic. I am not sure it is an advance to make him a scientist, arm him and change the nature of the creatures Matheson developed a kind of low-key realism that was doubly effective. In the original novel, which Stephen King says influenced him more than any other, Neville cultivated garlic and used mirrors, crosses and sharpened stakes against his enemies, who were like traditional vampires, not super-strong zombies. The story is adapted from a 1954 sci-fi novel by Richard Matheson, which has been filmed twice before, as "The Last Man on Earth" (1964) starring Vincent Price, and " The Omega Man" (1971) starring Charlton Heston. In his basement, Neville has a laboratory where he is desperately seeking a vaccine against the virus, which mutated from a cure for cancer. That's because after dark the streets are ruled by bands of predatory zombies - hairless creatures who were once human but have changed into savage, speechless killers with fangs for teeth. He lives barricaded inside a house in Greenwich Village, its doors and windows sealed every night by heavy steel shutters. Neville has only his dog to keep him company.
