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The 10 Best Vampire Movies of All Time

It’s safe to say our cultural fascination with the blood-sucking undead isn’t going away anytime soon.

The 10 Greatest Vampire Movies Ranked

From Bram Stoker to Anne Rice, from Nosferatu to Buffy, it’s safe to say our cultural fascination with the blood-sucking undead isn’t going away anytime soon. Not unlike zombies, those other revivified metaphors that feast on the living, the template afforded by these folkloric beings allows for no shortage of insights into the human condition, with the topics of sexuality, addiction, and mortality chief among them. By far the most famous of these, Dracula, is often cited as the most popular fictional character in all of cinema, with nearly 200 separate film appearances according to IMDb. Of course, the legend of these creatures extends far beyond just this particular icon, and those who are quick to mock the Twilight franchise for allowing its fanged characters to appear in full sunlight, unperturbed, are clearly unaware of the elasticity they’ve exhibited throughout both print and film history. Here, a fairly strict definition of the corporeal undead has been employed (apologies to Louis Feuillade and Claire Denis). These 10 films highlight not just great vampire films, but great films, period, and for each that made the cut, there was at least one more vying for inclusion.

Editor’s Note: This articale was originally published on October 9, 2014.


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10. Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell (1968)

The narrative and thematic similarities between this phantasmagorical work by Hajime Sato and the same year’s Night of the Living Dead are such that its continued obscurity is doubly baffling. Social niceties collapse among the survivors of a freak plane crash on a remote island, and that’s well before the appearance of a blob-like alien that splits open the foreheads of its victims, oozing inside to pilot their bodies, rendering them monsters of the bloodthirsty sort. The neon-hued B-side to Romero’s chiaroscuro classic, Goke is as hypnotically ravishing as it is relentless in its depiction of social—and ultimately global—collapse.

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9. The Addiction (1995)

One can love New York City while still acknowledging its ugly underbelly, and the same can be said for humanity at large. Abel Ferrara’s nightmarish vision understands that better than almost any other film. An allegory on everything from sexual violence and AIDS to the dual necessity and danger of political agency, The Addiction’s dreamy black-and-white cinematography suggests an extension of its philosophically brooding night-bound creatures, culminating in a crimson-soaked purging worthy of Travis Bickle.


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8. Thirst (2009)

Following his Vengeance trilogy with an even more prickly morality play, Park Chan-wook’s take on the creatures of the night feels like at least a half-dozen films rolled into one, intertwining domestic drama, social satire, doomed romance, a sexual thriller, a comedy of errors, and horror into a mesmerizingly seamless whole. Adapted in part from Émile Zola’s Thérèse Raquin, Thirst is a brilliantly self-reflexive exercise in genre thrills, as concerned with the relationships between its vampires and their would-be victims as it is with itself and the audience.



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7. Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970)

A girl’s first steps into adulthood prove a catalyst for the supernatural in this little-seen gem from Czechoslovakia. Fusing gothic imagery and storybook fantasy with the dread of the unknown (such as menstruation), the film sees Valerie (Jaroslava Schallerová)—not unlike Lewis Carroll’s Alice—lost in a wonderland of ethereal splendor and repulsive monsters, namely the vampiric Weasel (Jirí Prýmek), whose garish appearance befits his predatory tendencies. Criterion has owned the rights to this lighter-than-air wonder for the past two years, and a proper restoration can’t come soon enough.

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6. Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

An orgiastic celebration of Bram Stoker’s novel with enough oversized imagery to fuel a dozen lesser adaptations, Francis Ford Coppola’s divisive take on the text is worthy of its silent-film predecessors, reveling in artifice and employing a lifetime’s worth of filmmaking trickery in its tale of a love that transcends time. The result is an impressionistic, sometimes haphazard work that doesn’t merely overcome its stretch marks, but thrives on them, and has since proved an indication of even greater things to come in the still-underappreciated late career of one of cinema’s greatest artists.



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5. Only Lovers Left Alive (2013)

Jim Jarmusch’s coolest joint since Dead Man stars Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton as Adam and Eve, which is just the beginning of the film’s deliberately on-the-nose shout-outs to our collective cultural history—a great deal of which, this film suggests, was influenced, if not outright created, by these creatures, including a delightful John Hurt as Christopher Marlowe. Yes, that one. Movie stars as vampires as curators, mourning the downfall of humanity and the rise of mediocrity, these swoon-worthy, centuries-old beings have borne witness to the great and the terrible achievements of humanity over the centuries, and are justifiably depressed at the current state of affairs. Only Lovers Left Alive may be cynical, but it most definitely is sublime.


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4. Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)

Few collaborations throughout film history have been as rich as those between Werner Herzog and his best fiend, Klaus Kinski, whose work on this remake merits serious comparisons to the silent masterwork that preceded it. Aided by the permeating melancholy of Popol Vuh and the rousing discord of Wagner, Noferatu the Vampyre captures the very idea of the vampire better than arguably any other, lingering on images of death and decay (mummified corpses, disease-infested rats, and mounting coffins) with a hypnotically meditative intensity. Herzog’s obsession with ecstatic truth is a perfect match for this material, which honors its source even as it deviates from it. There may be no image more beautiful in all of horror than that of the plague-ridden Wismar town square, where the dwindling survivors celebrate the pleasures of life while mortality nips ferociously at their heels.

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3. Nosferatu (1922)

Watching Nosferatu is like standing in the same room as death itself. A brooding chamber piece rife with gothic overtones, existential ruminations, and occult imagery, of flickering light waging a losing battle against encroaching darkness, it’s the film to which an entire genre—and then some—owes its existence. F.W. Murnau’s classic symphony of horror strips away anything that might possibly romanticize its titular character (embodied with creepy majesty by the aptly named Max Schreck) or the events that surround him, bearing witness to the festering rot that infects the soul, emanating from the dark corners of the world.


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2. Near Dark (1987)

Kathryn Bigelow’s background as a painter was already evident in her sumptuous debut, The Loveless. Her sophomore feature, Near Dark, is a full realization of her prodigious talent, and one that she may never top. Tragically, both the film’s original release and continuing legacy have been overshadowed by that other, comparatively irrelevant 1987 vampire flick, The Lost Boys. A romance, a western, and a totem to lost youth in an era ravaged by infection and addiction, it’s a high-water mark in a decade filled with exemplary genre fare. Borrowing from, and surpassing, the exceptional chemistry of Aliens’s tightly knit cast, the melancholic Near Dark is gorgeous even in its savagery, and one of pulp cinema’s greatest achievements.



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1. Vampyr (1932)

Even for Carl Theodor Dreyer, a film like Vampyr seems like a miracle, as much a result of a singular vision as happenstance. The disorienting effect of the film’s fluctuating perspectives and supernatural imagery is only heightened by a distinct schism rendered between sight and sound, itself common to many productions rooted in the transition from silent film to talkies, and an all too appropriate quality for a work in which events unfold in separate, sometimes overlapping realms. Everyman Allan Grey’s (Nicolas de Gunzburg) journey into a nightmarish wonderland is a mesmerizing (and trailblazing) distillation of genre tropes, where shadowy forms permeate deep into the psyche to carry out their ethereal menace.

Rob Humanick

Rob Humanick is the projection manager at the Mahoning Drive-In Theater in Lehighton, Pennsylvania.

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