Don't ever make a thread talking about a movie again. Please.
I went into this movie thinking it was going to be trash, this thread made me wonder even more going in...
But coming out?
SPOILER WARNING
I was pleasantly surprised. The direction of the film was good, it had a film noir feel to the whole thing. The scenes with vampires felt really cold and dark, and the scenes with the humans were more vivid in color, even at night. So you don't have that right.
Also, the cure was really simple. Direct sunlight kills vampires. However there is a moment right before death where they become alive again, right before they burn to death again.
What happened with Elvis' character was that at that moment his heart was restarted he hit the water which put out the flame that would have killed him completely. So he reverted. Simple, and you don't need to have a wholly scientific explanation, and you know why? These are vampires to begin with, you can make up your own rules.
What made the movie interesting to me was that it wasn't the standard vampire flick. When I saw the preview I thought it was going to be aboue vampires vs. devolved vampires. Thankfully the devolved vampires was only in the movie for one reason - to put the vampires in the shoes of the humans who came before them. That was good to see. And it made vampirism come full circle. Infected blood makes you a vampire, infected vampire blood with the cure makes you human.
The only thing I didn't like was the very end, when they ride off...what do they do from then? I would have liked if the Vampires eat themselves back to humans, but that might have been too gory I suppose.
It was a much smarter film that I thought it'd be. If you want to see vampires go nuts, skip it. That spill.com review was on point. This was pretty much the sequel to I am Legend.
Film noir?

No my brother. Apparently, you don't even know what film noir is.

You might wanna look it up.
Yes, it's a vampire movie (the vampirism serving as a backdrop for the examination of the human condition, corporate greed, societal politics, etc.), but you can't just change the rules. Bend them, yes, but not change them. How would you feel if the flick dictated that you can turn someone else into a vampire by just looking at them? I'm certain you wouldn't go for that because that is a severe contradiction to the vampire mythology. It's too farfetched. No one would buy that, the same way I can't buy into the bogus and inarticulate explanation for exactly HOW the vampire cure worked.
It was a crucial part of the story [the cure], and you can't leave audiences to fill in the blanks on those types of things. It's called lazy screenwriting. The writers didn't do any research to underline or enforce the suspension of disbelief.
The whole "sunlight, heart starts pumping again" nonsense cure is not a rational nor well thought out explanation for what was implied to be a an infectious disease epidemic that caused vampirism in the flick. It's weak.
I didn't go to see the flick expecting to see a "Blade" movie, but I will tell you this: Blade was written more intelligently than Daybreakers.
Sequel to "I am Legend"? Now it all makes sense. That flick was trash too, and I worked on that flick when it was shooting in NY. Shit was garbage. I was even more shocked that the same dude who directed "Constantine" (which I liked), also directed "I am Legend."
If you thought "I am Legend" was good, I am not surprised that you would like Daybreakers.
For those that needed a scientific explanation for the cure.
I thought it was simple.
Sunlight is an obvious source of life.
It just doesn't effect plants.
Not only does it warm you but it helps your body to produce vitamins and it effects skin color, can help detox the body not to mention it has positive psychological effects on humans, sets the ryhtm of life ie. being awake and asleep. Sunlight suppresses the secretion of prolactin which aids in sleep, melatonin which effects mood energy levels and growth hormones, lack of sun even effects food cravings etc..
That's your imagination at work, because the films writers and directors never suggested that that was how the "cure" worked. Now if they had taken the time to even present an explanation such as yours, it would've helped a little, but they didn't.
More holes in that film than swiss cheese. Daybreakers should have been a twilight zone episode.
