the last guests to leave steve's new year's eve party.

seriously, i grant that, after seeing the movie, i can understand why some of the movie reviewers keep referring to the "dark seekers" as zombies rather than vampires.
and, steve, you make a valid point regarding how the cgi work this time around may distance the viewer more from the original story concept that Matheson proposed regarding the antagonism, fear-enmity relationship between Neville and the vampire survivors of the pandemic.
but i still give this version of the novel points above The Omega Man (which i still enjoy...hey, after all, it is CHARLTON HESTON!!!!!) and its predecessor, The Last Man on Earth (Vincent Price was excellent but the vampires depicted in that movie were bloody pathetic...and yes the pun is intentional!).
RIGHT THEN...BECAUSE CHANGES TO THE BOARD SET UP HAVE ELIMINATED THE GOOD OL' "INVISIBLE LETTERING" OPTION...THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPHS ARE POTENTIAL SPOILERS FOR ANYONE WHO HAS NOT SEEN THE MOVIE...SO JUST CLOSE OFF AND GO LOOK AT ANOTHER THREAD...
i also argue that the atmospher of isolation and solitude was well-portrayed through Will Smith's Neville's reaction to his "mannequin citizens" that he had set up around various common areas for him. especially the lunatic reaction to the one mannequin that was "out of place" because the vampires had moved it as part of the trap they set up for their Day Walker enemy.
i mean, Neville is screaming at a store dummy for not being where he is supposed to be! it's like when you or i get so caught up in a ventriloquist's routine that we find ourselves arguing with or getting mad at the dummy! for that one brief period, our perception of reality has shifted and the whole concept of anthropomorphosis goes sideways as we ascribe sentience, emotions, the whole gamut of what it is to be a person to a lifeless image.
that is what happened with the character of Neville. the long weeks, months, going on years of isolation slowly preyed on his mind despite his best efforts to combat it. even his canine companion was not enough to prevent the madness from slipping by his psychic defences. the vampires' use of one of HIS mannequin people as the lure for their trap was the final drop of water that caused his bucket of misery and madness to spill over in that single cathartic moment, blinding him to what should have been an otherwise obvious danger signal and causing him to stumble into a trap that he could have and would have under any other normal circumstances avoided with ease.
and, dave, i agree, any rumours or even suggestions of a possible "prequel" or "sequel" to this movie are disturbing though these days given Hollywood's penchant for blockbuster movie series, we really should not be surprised if someone floats that balloon to see how high it rises.
wonder what Mr. Matheson would say to any such suggestion?
Thanks, but I don't need any help getting into trouble since I seem to manage quite well on my own.