Is Will Smith Featured in Any Other Zombie Movies Than ‘I Am Legend?'
Forgot password
Enter the email address you used when you joined and we'll send you instructions to reset your password.
If you used Apple or Google to create your account, this process will create a password for your existing account.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Reset password instructions sent. If you have an account with us, you will receive an email within a few minutes.
Something went wrong. Try again or contact support if the problem persists.
Will Smith being yelled at by a zombie vampire in I Am Legend
Photo via Warner Bros.

Is Will Smith featured in any other zombie movies than ‘I Am Legend?’

‘Keep my wife's flesh out of your mouth.’

I Am Legend was sort of a wake up call for mainstream audiences, not only proving that Will Smith had the charisma and “it” factor to carry a blockbuster movie all by his lonesome, but also crowning him as the undisputed fresh prince of mercy killing his own dog on screen. It suddenly became clear that Smith did his best work acting against CGI monsters, cementing what we’d all suspected since his command performance in the music video for “Black Suits Comin (Nod Your Head)” in 2002. The general consensus: Not casting the Academy Award nominee in future entries to the rapidly expanding zombie film genre would be an enormous slap in the face.

Recommended Videos

Did it pan out? Well, that’s a complicated question, covering a career stretching all the way back to the 1980s. The answer is multifaceted. Like, don’t get me wrong, it’s a “no,” but it’s a blurry “no.”

Will Smith and the zombie movie spectrum

Will Smith and Margot Robbie as Deadshot and Harley Quinn, Suicide Squad (2016)
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures

If you want to get technical – even obnoxious – Will Smith hasn’t been in any zombie movies at all. The novel I Am Legend, which serves as the basis for the movie of the same name as well as two previous adaptations (1971’s Omega Man starring Charlton Heston, and 1964’s The Last Man on Earth with Vincent Price) wasn’t about zombies at all. The pandemic that left Robert Neville alone and increasingly socially awkward was 100% vampire-based. The modern remake veers away from some of the more blatant goofiness of the book, eschewing crucifix- and garlic-based defenses for claymores and grenades. Still, you can see the leftovers bits and pieces of the concept in 2007’s I Am Legend, with the infected unable to survive in sunlight.

So if we’re calling I Am Legend a zombie movie and, again, being really aggravating to talk to, then there’s room for interpretation as to what a “zombie movie” is. 

In Suicide Squad, Smith’s Deadshot deadshoots oodles of deformed, mindless soldiers under the power of an ancient sorceress. That’s at least zombie adjacent. 

In 2004, Smith starred in the DreamWorks animated picture Shark Tale, in which all of the characters have dead, glassy cartoon eyes, putting them somewhere on the undead scale. In 2013, he was in Anchorman 2, a film widely viewed as an unholy attempt to breathe life into a long-dead franchise, as one might a corpse through the use of dark and unspeakable magics. That Aladdin remake, like all of the live action Disney reimaginings, is a soulless, shambling carcass of something that was once full of life. Does that count as a zombie movie?

No. Not really. Sorry if I got carried away.


We Got This Covered is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Tom Meisfjord
Tom Meisfjord
Tom is an entertainment writer with five years of experience in the industry, and thirty more years of experience outside of it. His fields of expertise include superheroes, classic horror, and most franchises with the word "Star" in the title. An occasionally award-winning comedian, he resides in the Pacific Northwest with his dog, a small mutt with impulse control issues.