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It was an innocent time. A time when being a monster meant something. A time when a monster could actually scare someone. A time when the possibility of getting the blood sucked from your body was greeted with something akin to revulsion or, even better, horror. A time when vampires ruled the night, and you were forever running home after the sun set for fear of running into a thirsty bloodsucker.
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Jump ahead a century or so, and the undead nightstalkers have been transformed from black-hearted demons into creatures somehow far worse; emo kids. Blame novelist and recent born-again Anne Rice for this, who began the whole transmogrification of the vampire from beast of legend to mopey teenager with her Lestat series of vampire novels. Yes, Interview with the Vampire was a gothic feast of suppressed longings with hearty dollops of bloodlust, and more importantly, a terrific novel. But as the series went on, and on, and on, it played up the romance and forgot about the horror, with increasingly silly consequences (Memnoch the Devil, anyone?).
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Is there any hope on the horizon for an undead resurgence? As it stands, even zombies are more popular, and you can't say that they suffer from a surfeit of personality. They're even encroaching on Dracula's Elizabethan upbringings, which must rankle him something fierce.
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At least, that's the hope. And now arrives The Strain, ground zero for "a horrifying battle between man and vampire that threatens all humanity," if the back cover of the ARC is to be believed. And when you come across such passages as this, a description of one character's experiences at a Nazi concentration camp -
And how I would dearly love for that to be so. The zombie novels of David Wellington and Brian Keene are all well and good and bloody disgusting, but I miss the concept of a monster with a personality. But while The Strain is as gruesome and dripping red as one could hope, its overall impact as a horror novel is decidedly light. There is a definite feeling that more del Toro and less Hogan could have improved things tremendously.
To its credit, Strain begins with a terrifically tense first act; a plane lands at JFK Airport in New York, and immediately afterward goes completely silent. After calling in the experts, including Ephraim Goodweather of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the plane is cracked open to reveal a surplus of dead bodies with no discernible method of death. Quarantining the lot, Goodweather takes command of the examination of the bodies, which soon begin to display strange tendencies not usually associated with the recently deceased.
There is also a concerted effort to explain the biological aspects of vampirism; or at least, these vampires. This comes as no surprise considering del Toro's past; Blade II has an absolutely lovely autopsy scene of a vampire hybrid, complete with blood, guts, a heart sheathed in bone, and an autonomic nervous system that won't be content to shut down. This can lead to slightly clunky exposition, as the characters are prone to spouting their explanations in medical techspeak; "It engorges as they feed. The flesh flushes almost crimson, their eyeballs, their cuticles. This stinger, as you call it, is in fact a reconversion, a repurposing of the old pharynx, trachea, and lung sacs with the newly developed flesh...The vampire can expel this organ from its own chest cavity, shooting out well over four and up to even six feet." But it's good that someone has at last tried to present the vampire as a functioning biological being rather than a supernatural force. These vampires do deviate from the norm somewhat, what with their extensible tongues that can infect you from across a room in place of the more classic fangs of yore, but at least they're true monsters.
- you get a sense of real old-school horror making its resurgence.The searing pit. The hungry flames twisting, the greasy smoke lifting away in a kind of hypnotic ballet. And the rhythm of the execution line - gunshot, gun carriage clicking, the soft bouncing tinkle of the bullet casing against the dirt ground - lulled him into a death trance. Staring down into the flames, stripping away flesh and bone, unveiling man for what he is: mere matter. Disposable, crushable, flammable sacks of meat - easily revertible to carbon.
And how I would dearly love for that to be so. The zombie novels of David Wellington and Brian Keene are all well and good and bloody disgusting, but I miss the concept of a monster with a personality. But while The Strain is as gruesome and dripping red as one could hope, its overall impact as a horror novel is decidedly light. There is a definite feeling that more del Toro and less Hogan could have improved things tremendously.
To its credit, Strain begins with a terrifically tense first act; a plane lands at JFK Airport in New York, and immediately afterward goes completely silent. After calling in the experts, including Ephraim Goodweather of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the plane is cracked open to reveal a surplus of dead bodies with no discernible method of death. Quarantining the lot, Goodweather takes command of the examination of the bodies, which soon begin to display strange tendencies not usually associated with the recently deceased.
The first half of The Strain is where the mix of classic horror and 21st technology works the best. There is real menace in the early going-ons, and the authors expertly raise the tension through the addition of flashbacks to the life of Abraham Setrakian, the novel's Van Helsing, who became obsessed with tracking down the monsters after an encounter at the Treblinka extermination camp in World War II. There are also glimpses of an overarching narrative that will no doubt be fleshed out in the second and third novels, a hint that there is far more to the vampire empire than the almost mindless creatures that begin decimating the neighbourhoods of Manhattan.
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Where Strain disappoints is in the creation of terror. Perhaps it's del Toro's cinematic background, but the narrative is shallow, with very little in the way of deeper characterization. Goodweather is a bland lead, with the stereotypical ex-wife and son that he absolutely must save. Setrakian is more interesting, but as a vampire hunter, he's had the more interesting life. But his main purpose appears to be to fill in the gaps of the narrative. Other characters flit in and out, but make little impact.
And the vampires themselves? At the present, they're little better than zombies. Hopefully in the sequels they take on some life, as it were, but in The Strain they serve only as mindless obstacles to overcome.
Which is where the novel truly disappoints. The lack of strong characters, and the focus on action and shocks, would work far better on the screen. As a novel, terror can only truly be achieved if the reader has an empathy for the characters, a vested interest in their survival. If you take Stephen King's 'Salem's Lot as a template (and fair or not, it is still the gold medal standard of modern vampire fiction), The Strain comes up far short. King provided characters of depth, which made their eventual outcomes more emotionally wrenching. del Toro and Hogan try, but end up giving us ciphers, good for moving the plot along, but unable to create interest beyond the superficial "wait until you see what happens next" variety.
There is a lot of pleasure to be had with The Strain, and despite del Toro's protestations that a movie will never happen, the almost-inevitable adaptation should be great fun. And perhaps as a trilogy, the novel's flaws will diminish as being the product of first act jitters. But there's no denying that The Strain is somewhat limp, a fast-paced actioneer that sacrifices emotional terror for gross-out gore. Not that there's anything wrong with that. I'm just saying.
And the vampires themselves? At the present, they're little better than zombies. Hopefully in the sequels they take on some life, as it were, but in The Strain they serve only as mindless obstacles to overcome.
Which is where the novel truly disappoints. The lack of strong characters, and the focus on action and shocks, would work far better on the screen. As a novel, terror can only truly be achieved if the reader has an empathy for the characters, a vested interest in their survival. If you take Stephen King's 'Salem's Lot as a template (and fair or not, it is still the gold medal standard of modern vampire fiction), The Strain comes up far short. King provided characters of depth, which made their eventual outcomes more emotionally wrenching. del Toro and Hogan try, but end up giving us ciphers, good for moving the plot along, but unable to create interest beyond the superficial "wait until you see what happens next" variety.
There is a lot of pleasure to be had with The Strain, and despite del Toro's protestations that a movie will never happen, the almost-inevitable adaptation should be great fun. And perhaps as a trilogy, the novel's flaws will diminish as being the product of first act jitters. But there's no denying that The Strain is somewhat limp, a fast-paced actioneer that sacrifices emotional terror for gross-out gore. Not that there's anything wrong with that. I'm just saying.
MONKEY LIKES, BUT ONLY JUST
2 comments:
I don't know if vampires are scary but they certainly are cool. Have you heard that the Twilight DVD sales are expected to do really really well? http://www.iheartvampires.net/?p=312
Emily
iheartvampires.net
I loved this post. Frankly, I've always been intrigued by certain parts of vampire lore but have never had a vampire book "do it for me" in its entirety. Sure I like the sensuality of Dracula but hated the cliff-hanger moments in which Stoker got him out of a pickle by endowing him with yet another super-power (fog? really?), I love the New Orleans goth of IWAV but found the book dull as rust (not to mention spawning the emo-vampires you mentioned), and was not sufficiently scared by any (not even King's Salem's Lot). It's perhaps sad and telling that my favourite vampire book is Bunnicula.
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