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Young Vampires in Love Kathryn Bigelow's Near Dark Way back in 1987, two vampire movies were released within a few months of each other. The first was Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys, a big hit starring Kiefer Sutherland, and also the unstoppable 1980s juggernaut we call The Coreys Haim and Feldman just in case you were undecided about which side of the camp fence this one falls on. The other vampire film that year was the less popular Near Dark, a novel horror-western fusion directed by Kathryn Bigelow that ranks as one of the hidden treasures of ‘80s fright flicks. The film melds two disparate genres in a way that's admirably unforced. In one of its cleverest bits, there is a daytime stand-off between the vampires, holed up in a cheap hotel, and the local law enforcement stationed outside. It's your basic oater-style shoot-out with a twist: bullets fly, but it's the shafts of daylight that come streaming in through the bullet holes, and not the bullets themselves, that damage the undead. Both the horror and western elements are in full force throughout. There's room for the iconic image of a cowboy riding up on a white horse through a beautifully backlit blue mist in unabashedly classic western style, as well as the vicious vampire attacks of the famed bar scene, a tour de force of black-comic sadism and gore.
The story begins quietly enough, with an Oklahoma farmboy named Caleb (Adrian Pasdar) lazily slapping a mosquito as he watches the sun go down. Before long Caleb hops behind the wheel of his beat-up pick-up and drives into town, where he quickly falls under the spell of a young blonde named Mae (Jenny Wright), who first appears licking an ice cream cone. Their dialogue here is almost like something out of a Lugosi flick: Caleb: Can I have a bite? As evening goes on, it becomes increasingly clear that Mae is no ordinary girl, but Caleb doesn't get the picture, and he gets a bite on the neck for his trouble. By sunrise, Caleb finds himself kidnapped by Mae's makeshift family nasty criminals who feed on blood and discovers he is becoming one of them. Mae's nomadic vampire clan is played with gleeful nastiness by most of the cast of 1986's Aliens Lance Henriksen, Bill Paxton, and Jenette Goldstein (Bigelow was married to Aliens director James Cameron at the time, and the title of Cameron's film appears on the marquee of a theater that Caleb passes) as well as young Joshua John Miller as the pint-sized vamp Homer. Henriksen's marvelously sinister visage is a special effect in itself, and he and Goldstein are a great menacing team as the patriarch and matriarch of the vampires. Paxton also has a great time with his twisted good old boy swagger and plenty of one-liners ("I hate it when they ain't been shaved!" he exclaims before feasting on one of his victims). Much has been written about how Near Dark dispenses with the typical trappings of vampire lore fangs, elegant black capes, crosses, wooden stakes, garlic, and holy water are all out of the picture, as is the word "vampire" itself in favor of its own gritty vision of murderous drifters and conflicted cowboys. The family hunts for victims in a way that is far removed from the supernatural, and therefore more chilling. Young Homer lies seemingly prone underneath his bicycle, waiting to nab a Good Samaritan; Paxton's Severn grinningly hitches a ride.
August 2006 | Issue
53 Victoria Large is a Massachusetts-based writer and student. When not watching movies from all genres and eras, she finds the time to write about them. ALSO: More reviews |