The Film:  Daybreakers

(2010)

The Principles: 
The Sperig Brothers (writer/directors). Ethan Hawke, Willem Dafoe, Sam Neill, Isabel Lucas. Some really skinny dude who fits into emaciated vampire costumes.

The
Premise:
  The vampires that rule the world have done that very human thing: overconsumed and gotten themselves into deep shit. Is there a blood substitute, should they not exist, or are they becoming something much worse? One good vampire and a few human survivors aim to get to the bottom of it.

Is It Good: 
Yes. It’s actually quite good and the kind of vampire movie that reminds you of the potential in the oversaturated genre if actual creativity and a love of the medium shines through. It’s not perfect but there’s a lot of fun to be had in a movie that lives somewhere between Blade and Gattaca. Ethan Hawke is quite good as a vampire scientist trying to solve the crisis in a way that protects the humans but opposition is in every direction. His pacifist ways cause ripples amongst his peers and boss (Sam Neill, who does not enjoy his time in the film’s climax) and eventually he is on the run with a rogue group of humans led by Willem Dafoe. Fighting, politics, and happen. People explode into blood. We all smile.

It’s fun. It’s violent. It’s artfully made. The leads are all quite good. There’s also this undercurrent of old school that really clicks for me. The film seems very polished and serious but the more you pay attention the more you realize that the filmmakers are not taking themselves or their material too seriously. The reason it all works so well is the Sperig Brothers’ knowledge of FX and how hands on they are. Watching the DVD’s special features is a lesson in how much these guys bring to the table. I’m not a huge fan of their Undead but I appreciate it. These guys did so many FX shots in post on their own to make it bigger and more ambitious, it’s amazing. Entire CGI shots that sell this future as well as wire replacement, blood, eye coloring, all sorts of stuff.

It’s hard not to fall for a film this solid and flashy, yet intimate.


Is It
Worth
A Look:
  Most definitely. It’s a vampire film and I’m recommending it. That should be a clue. Vampire films and zombie films have run their course ten times over, yet any argument I try to concoct gets kicked to the curb as long as stuff like Let the Right One In or Thirst or Daybreakers comes along. This is a great addition to a collection, especially considering there’s a feature length ‘making of’ on the discs.

I like it a little more than most, I think part of that is how surprised I was that I was sold on the concept ten minutes in but either way the film is definitely quite a worthy genre entry. 

Random
Anecdotes:
  I love how immediate some of the violence is. I have doubts Sam Neill survived. Ethan Hawke is such a good actor and so interesting it makes me wish he’d do more genre stuff. Willem Dafoe keeps his clothes on, which is nice. I wish this was more successful. Because it’s good, unlike almost every other vampire movie [not mentioned in this article] over the past ten years.

Cinematc
Soulmates:
  Blade, Gattaca, Equilibrium.

The
Tally

So
Far

 Positive  Negative
 Pontypool Deadgirl
 State of Play The Children
 Orphan  It’s Alive
 Grace  Friday the 13th, Part 3
 Inside  Hounddogaudition

 3000 Miles to Graceland Columbus

Day

The Last Supper  Angel

Eyes

 Things To Do In Denver
When

You’re

Dead

Highlander:

The

Source

 World’s Greatest Dad  
The Killing Hour (aka The
Clairvoyant)
 Lady Beware  
The

Neverending
Story

 Pitch Black  
Battlefield Earth
 For All Mankind Heaven’s Prisoners
 Splinter Adrenaline:

Fear The Rush

 Blessed

by

Fire

 
 Outland  
The Kindred  
 

Top

Secret

 
 

Beer Wars

 
 
The Brood
 
The

Incredible

Hulk 

 
Undertaking

Betty

 
 Cache  
 
Taxi
Blues
 
 
Across the Universe
 
Lord of War  
 
Dead Heat
 
 
The

Adventures
of

Buckaroo Banzai
Across the

8th Dimension

 
 
Every

Which
Way

But Loose

 
 
The

Entity

 
 
The

Slammin’
Salmon

 
 
Gremlins
2:

The New Batch

 
Master Of The Flying
Guillotine
 
Against All Odds
 
  The

Last Waltz

 
 
David Cross – Let America Laugh
 
 
The
Vanishing

 
Tupac: Resurrection