The
Last Man on Earth (1964)
Not Rated
Starring: Vincent Price, Franca Bettoia,
and Emma Danieli
Rating:

out
of

|
Many people
believe that the first major zombie film was 1968's Night of the Living
Dead,
directed by George Romero. As of a few weeks ago, I did too. Then I discovered
a mention online of this little-seen 1964 movie starring Vincent Price called
The Last Man on Earth.Technically,
The Last Man on Earth isn't about zombies. It's about vampires.
However, these aren't like any vampires you may be used to seeing on
film. These vampires
shuffle around, aren't very bright, and only come out at night. They
may as well be zombies.
The
movie takes place in 1968, three years
after an airborne virus has wiped out all humanity, save for Robert Morgan
(Price).
Morgan
was a scientist who worked to find a cure for the disease right up until
he was the final living human being. The disease had the strange effect
of killing its victims and then reanimating them with a thirst for human
blood. Being vampires, they're unable to be out in the daylight and are
kept at bay with garlic and can be killed with a stake to the heart.
Morgan
struggles to stay sane as he attempts to hunt down and kill the remaining
vampires in the city. He travels the streets by day, killing the vampires
as they sleep in abandoned buildings, and then disposing of their bodies
by burning them in a large pit outside of town. By night, he locks himself
in his house, listening to jazz records, as the remaining vampires attempt
in vain to get inside to kill him. After three years, the routine has
gotten old and Morgan ponders his efforts (in voice-over narration) as
the keeper of order and inheritor of the Earth.
The
Last Man on Earth is notable for what it acheives on an obviously
barebones budget. The script is based on Richard Matheson's novel, I
Am Legend, and Matheson himself wrote the screenplay, although he
did so under a pseudonym. The editing is poor and the sets do very little
to hide the fact that, despite supposedly taking place in the
United States, it was filmed in Italy. Still, this grim tale of a man's
attempt to keep order in a world gone insane manages to focus the
viewer's attention on Morgan's day-to-day battle rather than on the negative
aspects of the production.
It's interesting to see very early examples of what have become zombie
and post-apocalypse movie clichés
such as Morgan foraging in an abandoned grocery store for food and announcing
his existence on a shortwave radio with no hope of a reply.
Vincent
Price initially seems a bit out of place as Dr. Morgan. His
performance ranges from stolid to bordering on overwrought. Somehow,
though,
Price makes the character work by simply being Vincent Price in the moments
of emotional midrange. Price's mature presence brings an unspoken intelligence
to Morgan that would have been lacking with someone else in the
role. Since there is very little dialogue in the movie, that quality
does the production a huge favor.
The
Last Man on Earth may seem clunky and even boring by today's standards
but it does manage to pull off an effective creep-out once or twice.
While it may not have widespread appeal, horror fans as well as science
fiction fans should check it out simply for its curio value. Seeing it
may help you appreciate the films that have borrowed from it over the
years. Trivia: This
film was originally going to be produced by Hammer Films of Great Britain.
They decided not to make it and passed the script over to their U.S.
associate, Robert L. Lippert, who produced the film in Italy. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |