New film "30 Days" gives vampires more bite
By Borys Kit
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - When director David Slade was young, he used to have nightmares about vampires. But over time, the bad dreams faded -- not because he grew older but because the vampire myth, redone over and over again in movies, lost much of its, um, bite.
"They just weren't scaring people anymore," he said.
Slade will have his chance to re-instill fear starting Friday with Columbia Pictures' "30 Days of Night." The horror film is based on the comic book miniseries created by writer Steve Niles and artist Ben Templesmith. Columbia picked up the rights for "Spider-Man" director Sam Raimi's Ghost House Pictures to produce back in 2002 when the first issue was published.
The story is set in an Alaskan town attacked by hungry vampires as it settles down for its annual winter month of sunlessness. Combined with its stark, painted art, "30 Days" took the comic community by storm.
The movie rejiggers the vampire story in a way that "28 Days Later," the 2002 horror movie directed by Danny Boyle, reinvented the zombie story. Until then, zombies were slow-moving, brain-eating creatures. Boyle turned them into fast-moving, fury-filled monsters. That movie's success shook up the cobwebbed genre, with remakes, sequels and imitators flooding the market. "30 Days" could do the same for vampire movies.
Niles, who shares screenwriter credit on the film with Brian Nelson and Stuart Beattie, didn't set out to reinvent vampires, but he knew which conventions he wanted to avoid.
"As time has gone on, we kept deconstructing, deconstructing -- and then you get to Anne Rice, and she makes them lead characters, sympathetic characters," Niles said. "And now, we have vampire detectives on TV and high school girls are dating them. It's gotten ridiculous. We completely disarmed everything that was scary about them."
So with Niles making vampires fearful on paper again, the filmmakers set out to make them terrifying onscreen. One thing they did was to make the new vampires old vampires. Pre-biblical is how Slade describes them. And he gave them a new look that owes more to Count Orlok in the German Expressionist film "Nosferatu" than Count Dracula as played by Bela Lugosi. Continued...



