Alright. Confession time: I am a closeted vampire lover.
Okay. Lie. I'm not even in the closet about the whole thing. I have a deep and passionate love for Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997) and Angel (1999) and I'm a shameless fan of True Blood (2008) vamp Eric Northman (played by the outrageously attractive Alexander Skarsgaard). Vampire Bill Compton? Not so much. But the love is there regardless.
Vampire films have been around since the dawn of narrative filmmaking and Stephanie Meyer has obviously not seen a single one. Vampires harken back to the silent era when high contrast black and white film gave a particular flair to the dark eyes, white faces, black lips of the leading ladies. In fact, the silent era's femme fatale character was known as a "vamp" and served as a prequel to the iconic vampire image of the years to come. Actor Max Schreck's monstrous Count Orlok served as a marvelous pioneer for this nascent genre in F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922). Soon after Count Orlok came Count Dracula in Dracula (1931), starring perhaps the most famous vampire to date--Bela Lugosi. A seemingly infinite number of Dracula sequels ensued and Lugosi played the undead icon to perfection each time. As Lugosi petered out his final years in the company of methadone and the Worst Director of All Time, the ever-eccentric Ed Wood, Christopher Lee arrived to take on Dracula's imposing yet beloved mantle. And he did so with resulting panache. His long-term portrayal of Stoker's (in)famous protagonist began with Dracula (1958) and led to the production of seven more Dracula films, which became a part of the so-called Hammer Films series; Lee appeared as our fanged friend in all but two of the seven sequels.
These more traditional approaches to the retelling of Romanian and Eastern European folklore and/or Bram Stoker's novel gave way to more imaginative and sociologically influenced re-interpretations. The vampire moved away from his disfigured horror-of-the-night persona and grew into the role of marginalized outsider. Since the original figure of Dracula undeniably represented temptation, seduction, and sexuality, it is unsurprising that the gay and lesbian community adopted the template of the vampire film in order to express their own "unconventional" views on romance and relationships. Though lesbian undertones had certainly existed in previous vampire films, it was Roger Vadim's Blood and Roses (1960) that first explored the taboo subject openly. Then, in 1972, José Ramon Larraz directed the unapologetically homoerotic Vampyres. Race became another critical lens through which the vampire was analyzed. Blacula (1976) is a notable blaxploitation film that translates the white, European character of Dracula into an African man bitten by a vampire and then shipped off to L.A. in his coffin.
So what have we learned from this vampire legacy? It's hard to be dead, misunderstood, and longing for love! And it's hard to be a gay man! Or a lesbian woman! Or a racial minority!
Well, you know what else is hard? Being a bullied kid.
It seemed like too great a leap to make but novelist John Ajvide Lindqvist accomplished the seemingly impossible task of creating a child vampire in a children's world.
(Now, before you stop me, I know, I know--Anne Rice created a child vampire as well in her celebrated novel The Interview with the Vampire (also a fun film starring Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, and Kirsten Dunst). Rice's young vamp Claudia, however, really only maintains the body of a child. Mentally, she is most assuredly an adult during the majority of the narrative.)
Back to the point. Lindqvist? Yes. Right.
The year 2008 experienced a refreshing taste of brilliance with Tomas Alfredson's adaptation of Lindqvist's novel in Let the Right One In. Although most vampire films in the past have focused on repressed sexuality and societal prejudices, Let the Right One In chooses instead to tell a tender coming-of-age story in which a 12 year-old boy is taught the difficult lessons of courage and confidence by a child vampire.
Oskar is a bit of a misfit. Friendless and lacking in self-esteem, he wanders through life praying to go unnoticed--even if it means missing recess. An easy target for bullies, Oskar is frequently tormented and his divorced parents seem either unaware of their son's almost daily abuse or unsure how to handle it considering their already very important, adult lives. One day, a pale girl named Eli and an older man become Oskar's neighbors. The girl seems strange, immune to cold, and unfriendly but soon Eli and Oskar become fast friends, connected by their identities as outcasts and an unrealized interest in revenge. Once Eli becomes aware that Oskar has suffered at the hands of bullies, she encourages him to stand up for himself, a suggestion that leads to action and unforeseeable consequences for so many in the quiet Stockholm suburb.
I could write so much more about the deceptively simple plot of Let the Right One In but I think I'll be deliberately withholding instead. Maybe then you'll seek out this gem before the English-language remake sullies the feel of Alfredson's premier masterpiece. When I began this post I thought I would end up writing a rant about America's inability to appreciate foreign films and their unmitigated support for remakes in spite of the great injustice it does to the original film. Subtitles are just not that hard, guys. Really. I promise. Nevertheless, that fuse seems to have gone out and now I find myself wandering down the path of greater resistance. I find myself wanting to bring up Twilight.
Watch me as I toss my pride right out the window.
First of all, let me state for the record that though I have seen Twilight, New Moon, and Eclipse and have read the entire quartet willingly (though I completed the fourth book under considerable duress), I hate the franchise. R.Patts and K.Stew? I'm just not that into you guys. Taylor Lautner tries and the kid has charm so I'll cut him a break but STILL. It appears that the three of them lack the acting skill required to perform in an annual third grade play. Nevertheless, Twilight gives an interesting commentary on the evolution of the vampire story. Once again, it seems that we've found a tale meant to convey a coming-of-age scenario in which the vampire acts not as a reflection of the human character but as a foil. The old Dracula films were meant to symbolize the "monstrous," "untamed," and "frightening" force of repressed female sexuality and the sudden nighttime appearance of the good ol' Count in the bedroom excused all ensuing sexy times. Dracula allowed the (vulnerable) human to see him- or herself as s/he truly was--namely, a sexual creature. In the later re-interpretations, gay and lesbian spectators and black spectators were asked to identify with the vampire and audiences as a whole subsequently experienced mainstream society's way of seeing these minorities as unnatural or dangerous.
But what do Eli and Edward Cullen ask audiences to experience? Instead of showing audiences what they truly are underneath all of society's expectations, these two contemporary vampires work to show us what we aren't. Characters like Oskar and (the shockingly dull) Bella Swan seem all the more human next to their vamp co-stars and we as audience members relate to them naturally. We appreciate their low self-confidence, the incurable klutziness, the gullible natures. But why would we want to relate to these traits? Perhaps it is because kindness, mercy, and the desire for a real connection to another come with the less glamorous aspects of humanity. It's just a theory but so far it tracks.
It is my opinion that the vampire film is currently undergoing a refreshing change that highlights aspects of cinematic identification traditionally ignored. It's possible that the two tender stories portrayed in Let the Right One In and The Twilight Saga are flukes in the greater, overarching trend. However, it's equally as possible that they are representative of a subtle but profound change in the ways that vampires can reflect the best of humans rather the worst. Regardless, I can't wait to see what blood-sucking changes happen next!