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News / Columns / Total Recall
Total Recall: I Am Legend and the Work of Richard Matheson
We examine the film work of the cult novelist/screenwriter.
by Tim Ryan and Alex Vo | December 12, 2007
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This week, Will Smith plays a guy who discovers he's the last man on earth in I Am Legend. So it's a good time to take a look at the movie work of Richard Matheson, who penned the film's source material.

Among sci-fi/thriller writers whose work has been adapted for the screen, Matheson's name is less familiar than Stephen King's or Philip K. Dick's. But his novels and screenplays have cast a long shadow over the pulp medium. Like King, Matheson tells stories of regular people who find themselves in extraordinary situations. Though his novelization of I Am Legend has been made into a movie several times (as 1964's The Last Man on Earth [91 percent] and 1971's The Omega Man [62 percent]) and is probably his best-known work, Matheson has shown an aptitude for twisty horror, thoughtful sci-fi, and sweeping romance.

Duel (81 percent) is a perfect example of one of Matheson's greatest strengths: The image of one man gradually coming to grips with inexplicable horror. While Terror at 20,000 Feet is docked points since it's only a short (part of The Twilight Zone movie, 63 percent) and the details of I am Legend are always drastically changed for film, Duel remains as taut and efficient as it originally was in 1971. Representing Steven Spielberg's feature-length directorial debut, the film follows a traveling businessman (Dennis Weaver) who's relentlessly pursued by a big rig and its never-seen driver. "Even without benefit of hindsight," writes Janet Maslin of The New York Times, "Duel looks like the work of an unusually talented young director."

Duel was made for the ABC network on a 10-day shooting schedule, but its success as a Sunday Movie of the Week prompted its theatrical release overseas, along with a limited run in the U.S. Spielberg shot three new sequences: the scene where Weaver tries to assist a stuck school bus as the big rig slowly creeps up on him, an equally compelling scene that has Weaver's car slowly being nudged into an oncoming train, and one that has Weaver calling his family before being terrorized. The last scene is interesting for a few reasons. For one, it shows a strong father figure before Spielberg's cynicism toward them crept into his work. And the scene's sentimentality actually helps the movie overall: it grounds Weaver's character into reality, in a movie that is otherwise a frightening existential pursuit across the California outback.


Duel theatrical trailer

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Comments (1-10 of 10 posts) | Reply
Hamboner
Hamboner writes:
on Dec 12 2007 06:09 PM

Boner?

(Reply to this)
a_sad_un-sorry_hashbrown
a_sad_un-sorry_hashbrown writes:
on Dec 12 2007 06:29 PM

Richard Matheson is awesome. I Am Legend is my favorite book hands-down, and his other work is fantastic.

I can't wait for Friday!!


(Reply to this)
hewpot
hewpot writes:
on Dec 12 2007 07:08 PM

woooooooooooooooooooooooooop

(Reply to this)
CinemaSpy
CinemaSpy writes:
on Dec 12 2007 08:56 PM

You might be interested to know that there is a brand new, in-depth interview online with Richard Matheson at CinemaSpy.ca

You can read it here >> http://www.cinemaspy.ca/article.php?id=379


(Reply to this)
Young Turk
Young Turk writes:
on Dec 13 2007 03:24 AM

I was at blockbuster a few hours ago and I saw a movie titled "I Am Omega", which is basically a rip off of this and Omega man (hence the title). It stars Mark Dascos, when I saw the cover I couldn't stop laughing, check RT I think it's on here.

(Reply to this)
citizenjames
citizenjames writes:
on Dec 13 2007 06:35 AM

wtf? okay, richard matheson had nothing to do with JAKOB THE LIAR or BICENTENNIAL MAN. BICENTENNIAL MAN was based on one of the robot novels by isaac asimov.

as for robin williams determining to make it as a dramatic actor after GOOD WILL HUNTING; by that time he'd already done THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP, MOSCOW ON THE HUDSON, DEAD POETS SOCIETY, AWAKENINGS, DEAD AGAIN, FISHER KING, BEING HUMAN, JACK, THE SECRET AGENT, HAMLET & matheson's own WHAT DREAMS MAY COME. he had been nominated for three academy awards (two for dramas), an emmy for BOP GUN (an episode of HOMICIDE) and five golden globes for dramas (and one win). i think robin had had to try at this point.

YOUNG TURK: that I AM OMEGA movie is made by asylum films. they have a reputation of making really cheap ripoffs of big hits and they always coincide with the theatrical release. SNAKES ON A TRAIN (SNAKES ON A PLANE), THE CHILD 666 (THE OMEN), CLAWED (SAW), TRANSMORPHERS (TRANSFORMERS) and about a dozen more. the hope prople get confused and rent their product instead. it's pretty underhanded and sneaky.

stay away from the back walls of video stores. there is lots of good stuff in the middle.


(Reply to this)
davidsmart
davidsmart writes:
on Dec 13 2007 01:33 PM

Stir of Echoes was the best movie adaptation of Matheson. The kid at the end clasping his hands on his ears? Excellence. I'm afraid for I Am Legend...I want it to be so good, and maybe it will, but now they are doing stuff with God Still Loves Us? A biohazard logo next to God? God Loves Us Maybe I don't get it.

(Reply to this)
vitajex
vitajex writes:
on Dec 13 2007 02:48 PM

In reply to this comment (#1353185)
Relax.

1.) The writer never said Richard Matheson wrote "Jakob the Liar" or "Bicentennial Man". They were offering them as evidence of Robin Williams' dramatic roles.

2.) "Jack" is probably not the movie to bring up to tout Robin Williams' dramatic acting chops.

And with the exception of 'Hamlet' (which he's in for all of, what?, 3 minutes) and "The Secret Agent" (which I haven't seen but I'm guessing isn't that great considering Robin Williams used a pseudonym, George Spelvin), Robin Williams hadn't done a dramatic role for 5 years before "Good Will Hunting". So one could argue that "Good Will Hunting" (and it's subsequent Oscar nod) encouraged Robin Williams to seek out more dramatic roles.


(Reply to this)
Young Turk
Young Turk writes:
on Dec 13 2007 09:53 PM

In reply to this comment (#1353185)
I know, I just think it's funny that whenever a blockbuster is about to open the cheap knockoffs flood the video stores. As for the middle of the store I have already watched most if not all of the stuff worth watching; that is available at least. (Paprika, to name one, was on the back wall and it is an amazing film).

(Reply to this)
Bruce K.
Bruce K. writes:
on Oct 19 2009 06:08 PM

Where's Legend of Hell House, or Incredible Shrinking Man, easily two of the best Matheson movies.

(Reply to this)
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