Thursday, September 24, 2009

Vampire Obsessions documented through the years

To Twifans goes the credit for first posting this article from Slatebut it's a pretty good point- we keep hearing in the media that Twilight has sparked the Vampire obsession, but this really isnt the case, even though Twihards would love to believe this is true. Slate compiled a pretty exhaustive guide to the Vampire craze for the last 50 years


You could be forgiven for thinking we're in the midst of an unprecedented madness for vampires. "True Blood Season Premiere Looking to Capitalize Off of Vampire Craze," headlined the Associated Press in June. "CW joins vampire trend with 'Diaries'," announced the Philadelphia Inquirer last week. The Hartford Courant asks, "Why Vampires Now?"

A better question might be, why vampires ever? Looking back, it's hard to think of a period when we weren't in the middle of a vampire craze. In the late 1970s, Anne Rice started raking in the money with Interview With the Vampire, and movies like Werner Herzog's Nosferatu the Vampyre and the comedy Love at First Bite were critical hits. Then came The Lost Boys, Near Dark, Bram Stoker's Dracula, Innocent Blood, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (the movie), four more Anne Rice books, and Interview With the Vampire (the movie)—which could all be lumped into a rage for vampires that lasted clear through from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s. Vampires were back again in the mid-1990s, with Buffy (the TV show), the Blade movies, Southern Vampire Mysteries (the book series), and From Dusk Till Dawn. And now we've arrived at the highly touted mid- to late-2000s vogue of Underworld, Twilight (books and movies), True Blood (based on Southern Vampire Mysteries), and The Vampire Diaries.

They go on to detail how the real periods of time that should be evaluated are more so when we are in Vampire famine

How did they document this?

To figure out whether there really have been any vampire-free periods, we dug through online compendiums, from Wikipedia to obsessive fan sites like the Vampire Library, and compiled a list of the most important vampire-related books, films, and TV shows of the last half-century. In total, we included 169 movies, 106 books, and 62 seasons' worth of TV.

It turns out there were indeed a few periods—four, to be precise—where the vampire genre seemed to hit a mini-recession. Here's a rundown of each dry spell and the vampire works that brought the genre back from the dead.


The First Half, beginning in the 1960's showing the first real drought. I LOVE that they throw in the Count!
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Part Two, beginning with Lost Boys!
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Read the entire article and see the actual 4 periods of drought in Vamplove at Slate

1 comment:

  1. Blade 1, had some VERY hot lead vampire I remember also. But oh man did lost boys ROCK MY WORLD. Vampires are HOT and SEXY!!!!

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