This post title was the title of a terrible movie, a spoof that was neither funny nor clever.
For this series of posts, perhaps it makes sense.
I am not completely against attempts to sympathize with the monster. If the monster represents something human in us or something valuable in nature, that can be valuable.
I can also see where certain tendencies now would lead to always casting the humans as the worst in favor of the monster. I don't appreciate it, but I can see how it happens.
I have pretty much lost patience with making the vampire the sexy love interest.
I saw a theory once that this happens because the vampire kills in an embrace. Maybe it helps that the corpse can look still look pretty intact. After all, consumption was romanticized for a while, and was sometimes linked to vampires, so why not the fictional character that you can cast with really handsome actors.
I know I am off-trend here; I have my reasons.
For a while, I had a real fear of being bitten. When I had nightmares, they were generally about vampires (even though the underlying phobia seemed to come from a dog). Stories and screenplays I have worked on featured vampires. I get the fascination.
Energy vampires -- usually in the form of attention seekers -- are my personal weakness. That may be why I feel the threat so much.
As someone who also usually has a lot of responsibility and can get overwhelmed by it, at times I do feel the appeal of someone coming in and just taking control of everything, removing the problems.
That is not what I actually want, though. Maybe what I really want is more sleep or more money or for someone else to take care of one of the things so that I can concentrate on the others and get in a nap.
Maybe it really is always just a desire for more sleep, but not in a coffin.
Our simple, fantasy solutions are probably not what we really want.
My solution is not going to be wanting to die, or wanting to be undead or under the control of someone else and certainly not changing in a way that harms other people.
I may be more frustrated with the current tendency to idolize the evil, especially at the expense of the good.
Yes, trying to divide two sides into good and evil can be reductive and overly simplistic, but subsisting on the blood of others, stealing their life forces, and twisting their souls... it's going to be pretty hard to put a positive spin on that.
First it takes changing the rules and the purposes of how it all works. Then, at least in the case of the Athena Club books, it takes ruining everyone else, making them villains to justify (or nullify) any malice in your hero.
But yeah, it bugs me more because I liked the source material as it was.
For another take on the cycle of vampire sex appeal, you may be interested in this episode of Monstrum: