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Grave of the Grave of the Fireflies has moved http://bestvampiremovies.org hearts of the audience as they see the effects of the war through the eyes of two young orphans. The film, written and directed by Isao Takahata, is a reflection of the World War II and the poor socioeconomic situation of Japan. The main characters, Seita and his younger sister Setsuko, struggle to live everyday in the destroyed country and find themselves in a famine. The movie was accredited for its antiwar theme, earning praises all over the world. Astonishingly, the film still gains popularity up until today as people still watch it through anime streaming online.

Lifeforce The subtitle for Tobe Hooper's 1985 film could be naked vampires from space meet Night of the Living Dead. Starring genre favorite Steve Railsback, a preenterprise Patrick Stewart, and Mathilda May as the lead naked space vampire, Lifeforce is a fun, gory movie that failed to find a big screen audience. Railsback stars as a shuttle astronaut who unwittingly unleashes the vampires on earth. Once here they begin to suck humans dry and infect them. Only the infected humans do not come back as vampires but desiccated zombies. Well actually a zombie/vampire hybrid, you might say. The space vampires and infected feed not on blood but the souls or life force of victims. Lots of violence, gore and nudity make this a fun overlooked vampire film.

Fright Night, 1985 What do you do when you think your next door neighbor is a vampire? One can only imagine the frolicsome fun to be had in this 1985 horror comedy. Starring the talented Chris Sarandon as the suspected vampire, Jerry Dandrige, the acting in this film is right on beat and superbly done. Roddy McDowall is equally brilliant in his role as washed up actor/vampire hunter, Peter Vincent. This movie has a massive cult following and it's not hard to see why but... if you don't want to see some old grainy movie from the 80's, Fright Night is one of several films that is being picked up for remake. Currently in production, I'm equally excited about the new version, which stars great actors like Colin Farrell, Christopher MintzPlasse and, a personal favorite of mine, David Tennant (best known for playing the 10th Doctor in the popular "Doctor Who" series).

I loved the sense of darkness and claustrophobia in "30 Days of Night". These vampires are far from the romantic creatures we usually see in vampire roles. You can almost feel the cold of the Alaska winter when you watch this movie. The townspeople try to survive the month long night, as their town is slowly obliterated by a pack of barely humanoid, Old World vampires. I thoroughly enjoyed the originality of this movie's premise.

Beyond the physical dimension of life on earth there are beings which are nonphysical, which are both dark and light. Human beings who cannot see beyond the physical dimension of life are actually trapped on a consciousness level. Their consciousness is trapped on the physical dimension. It is like only being able to see a small part of life, and then thinking that that small part of life is all that exists. Let's say for example you lived in a small town, and you were only allowed to live in that town. In that town there were no televisions, cars, or big buildings, airplanes, or technology. Now if you spent your entire life in that town, it would be all you knew. In fact, you would believe so strongly that what was in that town was all that there was in life. If someone new came into your town and told you that there was something called a city, that had automobiles, airplanes, television and technology you would not believe them. In fact, you might even call them crazy. You would not believe them because you spent your whole life in a limited environment, and you became trained to believe that this environment was all that there was. Now very similar to this story is the dimension of physical and nonphysical life. People who have not gone beyond the physical dimension are trapped within it, and are trained to believe that it is all that exists.

Once Bitten Jim Carrey got his first main role in this very entertaining 1985 vampirethemed comedy as the naive high school student, Mark Kendall. Kendall had heard "no" so many times by his high school sweetheart, that when he and his buddies head to a singles bar, he falls easy prey to a seductive, centuriesold vampiress, played by Lauren Hutton. While originally earning a rotten score on the "Rotten Tomatoes" rating scale, Carrey's rise to fame propelled Once Bitten toward a cultfollowing status.

With folks defecting from Ebay to go to Amazon, with Prime subscribers getting free shipping, and with more and more retail moving online, this is going to play out like a very wellwritten soap opera. We were all wondering how the fall out from the Netflix announcement this summer (see: The Confession) would affect the streaming landscape. With Dish network pissing away an opportunity with Blockbuster and now Amazon putting ink to paper over the weekend, I'm gonna get my popcorn ready'

The Forsaken This 2001 movie bears some resemblance to 1987's Near Dark. Once again we have a nomadic pack of vampires and once again there is a "cure" for the vampirism. Most of the similarities end there though. The vampires in The Forsaken seem more thrown together and less of a family unit than in Near Dark. The Forsaken also attempt to create a vampire mythology that Near Dark did not attempt and frankly did not need. While not as good as film as Near dark, The Forsaken is one of the better vampire films out there. It is bloody, fast paced and introduces us to the beautiful Izabella Miko.