Vampires

Reviewed by: Resonance

November 23, 1998

Return

I saw Vampires. It sucked. John Carpenter's propensity to try and convert every plot into a Western is a little tiresome; in addition, the movie was marked by very poor editing (one of those where a character makes a statement early in the movie that clearly indicates knowledge that he doesn't have until the end of the movie) and, well, general crappiness. One of those movies where you go, 'gee, that was a really interesting idea, what happened to it?' And the ending was anticlimactic and a tad improbable, not to mention trite.

Part of the allure of the vampire genre is the powerful sense of mystery, sensuality, and power that surrounds the myth (at least, surrounds the myth as we understand it). The movie was very perfunctory in that regard. The most interesting parts of the story were ignored or very briefly treated with; it was as if Carpenter were deliberately taking the vampire out of the vampire movie, and trying to tell a straight up action story in which the villian and a few others happened to be bloodsuckers. I can respect the experiment, I guess, but not on my dime when the results are as they were in Vampires.

And, make no mistake, the result was crap -- there were a few funny lines, interesting scenes and ideas, and James Woods isn't as bad as you might think in the lead role, despite a contradictory script and little chance to develop a powerful character -- but overall, it's not Scottish, folks.

Christ, I liked Blade more than that.

 

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