If you can picture Near Dark done on a bigger budget with less
finesse, then you'll get an idea what expect with John Carpenter's
Vampires.
But Carpenter makes up for a lot with some pretty hot vampire battles. He
goes all out with these ghouls, who put up quite a fight as they're
repeatedly skewered and shot, leading up to being dragged out of their
darkened Southwestern lairs as they're turned into crispy critters by the
sun.
The plot goes something like this: Not surprisingly, the Catholic church
has always known that vampires exist, but they've kept a low profile and,
most recently, enlisted top-notch vampire hunter (with a history of his
own) Jack Crow (James Woods). But things are beginning to come to a head
when it's discovered that one of the most powerful vampires of all time,
Valek (a spooky Thomas Ian Griffith), is closing in on a particular
crucifix (that's right, crucifixes can't hurt real vampires) that
will enable Valek and his brethren to walk among the living during daylight
hours.
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