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Set in an America following a vampire apocalypse (this is set ten years in) this doesn’t appear to have generated any buzz and that’s probably due to it not realising an apocalypse in any sense, so let’s explore.
America is now divided into three zones, the vampires live on the East Coast and, presumably, this is where the outbreak began. The cities are complete, the scenes we see suggest that the vampires have simply usurped humanity and now live as top dogs with humanity as slaves. The vampires themselves are divided into born (so purebloods one would guess) and those who have been turned and have a ruling council of elders. They have machinations and politics and killing another vampire is allegedly a no-no.
The humans are on the West Coast, they still have a President, Margaret Robertson (Julia Farino), and a fragile truce with the vampires that have made it necessary to have compulsory blood donation to send to the vampires as a condition of the peace (known as the Bloody Sunday agreement). The centre of the country is a no man’s land which both sides are meant to avoid of course the humans have a desert base there the Haven. The country is quarantined by the rest of the world what happened to Central and South America and Canada is not mentioned at all.
So, the vampires have been doing experiments and are creating synthetic blood, which means they won’t need the humans any more. The humans have managed to reactivate a nuclear weapon (during the fall, the president at the time had them disarmed to stop the vampires from getting them) and have decided to take out the drones (which the UK have flying over America) and nuke the East Coast. Meanwhile, the Brits (who have told the public that there are no human survivors in the US) have developed a cure (that you have to inject directly into the heart) and once they realise the American plan, send in a SAS team to deliver it (by dropping them in no man’s land and not on the East Coast).
The commander of the Haven is Gerry (Simon Phillips, Strippers Vs Werewolves), who lost his wife Marie (Eve Mauro) during the uprising and whose son, Adam (Everett Moss), has grown up in the apocalypse. Adam finds a passed-out girl, Yvonne (Nicola Posener), in no-man’s land and brings her back to the Haven where it turns out that she is a vampire. She claims to want to warn the humans about the synthetic blood and hates her condition, they fall for each other but no one seems remotely interested in the fact that she doesn’t seem to frazzle in the sun (she’s been scientifically manipulated and also doesn’t have vampire eyes). It is also bizarre that it turns out that Marie is her vampire mother (or stepmother, presumably) as it is a coincidence too far really and betrays a soap opera heart to the storytelling.
So, despite the Haven crew’s raggedy outfits, none of this feels like an apocalypse. The vampire territories and human territories seem like business as usual. The vampires are incredibly overpowered humans who don’t stand a chance (Yvonne saves them from one raid and, despite accepting being imprisoned, could have just broken the door to her cell) and we see them in daylight with either whole body covering or lashes of sunblock. The SAS frazzle one with a UV light so one wonders why none of the US soldiers seem to have the same.
The acting is ok with some of the cast but with others, it feels off the vampire Machiavelli called Victor (David B. Meadows), for instance, would probably come across better if the thick accent was eschewed. There is no rhyme or reason for the vampire hierarchy (the elders are there by dint of age and the chief elder is an exercise in lack of exploitation the casting as Bill Oberst Jr. (Black Water Vampire & Dis) is too good of an actor to have been used so little) and thus the elevation of Marie, as a newly turned, seems unrealistic. But it is the underexplored and thoroughly holey backstory that spoils this the most.
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