Daybreakers Embraces Its Own Silliness
Sunday, January 10th, 2010With films like Daybreakers, I’ve noticed a trend that they tend to take themselves too seriously. Luckily Daybreakers realizes that it is silly and over the top. Vampires are creatures that are no longer strictly for horror. Since Joss Whedon’s Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Mel Brooks’ Dracula: Dead and Loving It, and the Blade trilogy vampires have successfully crossed over into comedy and action films. Daybreakers is a clever conglomeration of both.
From the onset of the film, I was not sure whether or not this would be pretentious and unaware of its own ridiculousness. It opens with a vampire using the sun to commit suicide. The quick cuts, used to splice footage of sentences from her suicide note and the actual act of suicide, are so fast that it becomes funny. I’m certain that this is intended to be taken seriously, but ironically sets the proper tone for the film whose concept is over the top. Part of the reason that vampires are frightening is that they were mysterious. But in Daybreakers that trope is impossible considering that the world is primarily inhabited by vampires.

I was surprised by Ethan Hawke. The last movie I saw of his, in which I liked his performance, was The Dead Poet’s Society. Unfortunately this actor is not suited for action hero roles. Strangely this doesn’t stop him from being cast as the action hero type. He has softer features, and personality than the traditional action star. Hawke is well suited to play Edward Dalton in Daybreakers. Dalton is a scientist. He’s not intended to be a tough guy. The action scenes in which he is involved allow for him to build the courage, and strength that a person in his position could build should he rise to the occasion. He’s not a seasoned fighter, and he’s not supposed to be one. That’s why it works.
The successful comedy in the film is driven by the absurdities of vampire society. I can sum this up with two words: vampire animals, specifically, but not limited to, a chimpanzee. The unsuccessful comedy is most of Willem Dafoe’s dialogue.
Since Daybreakers isn’t strictly comedic, I have to mention the action scenes. The action was successfully exciting, but usually felt sudden and forced into the film. As Captain Logan said after we saw Daybreakers, the reason that the action scenes worked for the film was that the rules of the universe were used. The car chases could have been simple chases scenes, but they managed to include the vampire mythos in the scenes. Personally I think they should have spent more time on the subplot, than the largely forced action scenes. The subplot was not ignored, but it wasn’t explored to the detailed scope to which it could have been explored.

Willem Dafoe’s characterization was the most disappointing aspect of the film. Dafoe plays a good ol’ boy, and uses a barely convincing accent to match the intention. It makes sense that his character would be a little country, but it plays into the stereotype of the grease monkey. Dafoe would have used his own voice, and his performance would have been stronger for it. Dafoe’s performance as Lionel ‘Elvis’ Cormac was adequate. Although the film is largely successful in its creative endeavor, the blame for Dafoe’s character falls on the writer and director. Cormac’s lines were intentionally comedic and were forced into the film like the action. I think that at some point someone thought that the clever comedy in the film was not enough, and decided that they needed more blatantly presented humor. It flows against the established tone, and wasn’t needed. But then again, maybe the lines wouldn’t have been so problematic if Dafoe was allowed to be himself.
The Verdict: I’ll give Daybreakers a 3 out of 5. It has everything it needs to be funny and exciting, but it fell into the pitfalls of ignoring the potential of the subplot, and underestimating the worth of its own comedy.

