Vampire
“Castlevania: Nocturne” shows colonizers and aristocrats for who they really are: blood-sucking monsters.
Director Pablo Larraín’s latest film premiered at the Venice Film Festival, creating an alternate universe in which the Chilean tyrant is still alive as a 250-year-old bloodsucker.
We traveled to the vampires’ dilapidated Staten Island mansion—which is in Canada—to discover what it is about this series that is so ludicrously and battily (get it?) hilarious.
The FX series about Staten Island vampires acclimating to 21st-century life was already TV’s funniest, most absurd half-hour comedy. But Season 5 raises the stakes, so to speak.
Three decades after his turn in “Vampire’s Kiss,” Nicolas Cage is back doing the bonkers vampire thing—in a film that reveals that Hollywood has lost the bloodsucking plot.
In “Renfield,” a misfire in every way imaginable, at least Nicolas Cage seems to be having fun.
For nearly three decades, experts have devoted time and resources to studying the vampiric behaviors described by “Renfield’s Syndrome.” The problem is that it’s totally made-up.