I would like to welcome fellow author,
Nicholas Paschall, on to the blog today. Nicholas is going to take us on a journey and explore the history of the Vampire through popular fiction.
Vampires. The very word conjures up images of
red-eyed, pale skinned angelic figures that feast on human blood, strangely
erotic yet mind-numbingly dangerous at the same time. From the innocent looking
child vampire to the androgynous ancient, they range in all shapes, colors and
sizes. In books and cinema, we have three categories of vampires we can look at
and analyze: the beautiful, the hideous, and the weird.
The beautiful can be seen in Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire and Stephanie
Meyer’s Twilight saga. Both highlight
vampires as both dangerous and attractive creatures, with pale skin and taut
muscles that provide preternatural strength. This is a step away from the
original vampire story by Bram Stoker but it is a creative move. Meyer’s vampire’s
aren’t even harmed by sunlight, though they do adopt a hostile stance against
werewolves as it seems to be a classic route when the two inhuman species meet.
Other instance of beautiful vampires with werewolf aggression are seen in the
box office thriller Underworld series,
and to a lesser extent Van Helsing and
the dry comedy Dark Shadows, which
was based off of a television soap opera of a supernatural family not unlike
the Munster’s, though far more dangerous.
Twilight (5/11) Movie CLIP - I Know What You Are (2008) HD
The second category is the hideous vampires,
vampires that shed their mortal skin to take on their true appearance, that of
a monster. These vampires represent a more defined fear of the unknown that
humans face every day. Unlike a shuffling zombie or a serial killer, the
hideous vampire is almost unkillable. You’ve seen them in film: in Underworld: Evolution you have one of
the ancient vampires infused with werewolf blood, creating a monster that is
nigh indestructible. Bullets, silver swords, and holy relics do little to this
creature. They finally manage to slay it through a combination of luck and
skill from a vampire/werewolf hybrid. In Nosferatu
they went to great lengths to pull the vampire’s appearance away from that of a
human, making the monster possess spindly fingers ending in wicked hooks,
bulging eyes with a misshapen bald head and elongated ears. He crept silently
around his lair and your home, and killed those he drank from. The difference
between the beautiful and the hideous is that the beautiful doesn’t necessarily
kill the person they feed upon. The hideous always kills their victim, making
them more monstrous than ever as they take life away from the natural to fuel
the unnatural.
Now the weird is a category that only applies to
vampires that straddle the line between the first two categories. In Rachel
Caine’s Morganville Vampire book
series, we have a community of vampires living openly with the town residents
while hiding from college students who attend the local university. They have
blood vans that come by and take blood “donations” from residents to feed the
vampires, while some vampires prefer to hunt their prey. Some have gone mad
over their centuries of life while others have grown detached from their human
side. The older they get the more radical they shift in an emotional direction.
The father of the vampires, Bishop, comes to town and tries to usurp control
from his daughter Amelia while using the humans of town as bait. He wants a
book that details how to create a new vampire, as it is a lost art and their
numbers are dwindling due to a rare disease that slowly drives them into an
animal-like state, more beast than anything else that seeks warm blood.
In this series we have vampires like Myrnin who
is a mad alchemist, among other things. He synthesizes drugs to stave off the
madness in the vampires and often comes close to killing his semi-willing
apprentice Claire Danvers. Myrnin is erratic and strange, with humor that none
get unless you are amused by mad antics of something that could easily snap you
in half. He dresses as a Pierrot for a Halloween ball while forcing Claire to
dress as the Harlequin, because he believes the sad clown Pierrot is actually
the funny and dangerous one. This amuses Bishop, who is instantly reminded why
he doesn’t like Myrnin who insults him, then attacks him with a dagger while
cackling madly, proving he is just as strong as the elder vampire before
fleeing. Then you have vampires that have detached from humanity entirely, like
Mr. Pennywell. Described as an “androgynous dummy”. Mr. Pennywell is an amoral
vampire that will follow the laws of the town so long as they please him. He
corners people and often attempts to kill them, as he remembers the days where
vampires lurked in the dark and fed well.
Then we have Amelia, the governess if the town.
She offers protection to the humans with magical homes to prevent vampire intrusion,
holds up laws and keeps the vampire population in check. She’s a preternatural
beauty that is weak from the sands of time wearing her down. She creates the
first new vampire in decades as she gets a hold of the book, creating
controversy amidst the community.
Then you have movies where the weird vampires
come out to play. In foreign films you have Vampire
Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl, a horror/comedy where a vampire tricks a boy
into eating her blood, making him into a vampire. The girl that likes him dies
through a tragic accident, but her mad scientist father reassembles her with
the parts from various club members, making her a bizarre construct of
considerable might. The reason this falls into weird is some of her powers lie
in her cloak, which allow her flight, as well as her ability to walk about in
daylight. She breaks norms and converts new vampires through unique methods. In
the end she triumphs using swords made of blood, and fights a trio of monster
school girls by pulling their skulls from their heads and throwing them in a
pile.
The weird vampire is perhaps the most human of
us all, as they have human emptions (sometimes to a dangerous extent) and a
conscience that makes them ponder their actions. Some are good, some are bad;
they’re humans with special powers. Judging them is a case by case basis,
unlike the beautiful or hideous, who are much more one-dimensional than the
weird.
Now if you think that my evaluation of vampires
isn’t encompassing enough, that’s fine. There has almost been a century of
vampire lore that has been created thanks to Bram Stoker and Nosferatu, so I’ve no doubt missed
something. But think on the subjects next time you see a vampire movie or read
a novel.
Nicholas Paschall is a horror fiction writer. Let's take a look at his latest book.
David is in college and just keeps screwing up. After his latest mistake
of throwing a huge party while his parents were out of town, his mother
decides to leave him stranded at his Grandmother's house in Alice
Grove. What starts out as a horrible idea blossoms into a nightmare as
ghosts, Witches, and curses come alive in the sleepy town. How will
David handle it all?
Where can I purchase this fabulous book?
About the author.
I'm just a humble ghost in the machine, a lurking specter in the darker reaches of the internet. I publish the dreams best left unsaid because I believe they should be heard. I graduated from the Univerity of Texas at San Antonio with a degree in History, which basically means I'm a researcher. My desktop is littered with projects that I hop to and fro like a mad cricket, working here and tinkering there. I have a website that I update five times a week at minimum. Hope to see you there!
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx