Actually, come to think of it, my avatar should reveal which Vampires I like. And they can pound any Anne Rice "Oh it's so dull being immortal" bloodsuckers. 
Dracula posses the abilities to turn into a wolf, bat, and mist.Eyclonus said:Actually Anita Blake, Isabella Swan, and at least one scene for every POV character by Anne Rice, are Mary-Sues of the authors. Blake is the most blatant one and Anne Rice is clever at keeping a narrative to it, albeit a very passive slow one. But I just don't get the damned obsession with Twilight.
If I recall correctly didn't Dracula also posses the ability to transform into a wolf?
I could be misguided and I'm not checking, but doesn't he control the mist but ultimately move within it - yes there is a mist in Mina's room, but she later claims to have thought she saw his face, and the mist on the boat is described something along the lines of "with a shape moving within it".B-lockdown080 said:Dracula posses the abilities to turn into a wolf, bat, and mist.
I'll admit I watched the old film more recently although I have read the book, and fair enough about most of it but, I didn't acutally mean to imply that he could enter buildings without permission, and he is compared to a lizard or snake (I'll admit I'm going off memory) long before bats are mentioned, in the book when he is scaling one of the walls (no pun intended). Aside from that thanks for the corrections.Gitsnik said:What? There's bats at the window all the time feeding on Lucy, the Count flies off towards London at one point (though whether that's in Bat form or not escapes me at the moment). He matches almost exactly most modern views of vampires (before anyone points out that crucifixes don't work, note that Hellsings crucifix - the real hellsing not the crappy one with Frankensteins Monster - was silver so it's entirely possible that a crucifix is a problem)tomdavi said:Anyobody ever read Bram Sotker's Dracula? His ideas and version of vampires are completely different from the ones portrayed in most of the more modern stylised vampire books, and yet Drac. is seen as being the archetypal vampire. He was in fact seen as being a reptilian creature (bats etc never get a real mention to the best of my knowledge), who had the capacity for extreme violence.
By holding Harker at his house for a full month before feeding? I'm wondering if you didn't just watch the movie - a lot of these things sound like that. Anyway I don't mean to rag.tomdavi said:He also struggled to disguise his desires for blood.
Dracula can't enter buildings without permission, and stays in the night quite often (though again it escapes me whether he can step into the light or not). The fact that you did it for English once probably indicates why your memory is vague. myself, I recently picked up the Leslie & Klinger edition of Stoker's fable, which is an excellent read for all the annotations and notes made.tomdavi said:Going back, before even that to the origins of western vampire myths and most of the time the only "restrictions/ drawbacks" on them, was that they struggled to enter holy buildings, couldn't enter buildings without permission (something now often edited) and, in light they were simply reduced to not being as tough or powerful and having at best sensitive light skin. (btw I'm not some kind of vampire nut, I had to do a project on them in school for english once).
Edit: Yes dracula is one of my favourites, though I'm a big fan of Lestat and whatsisface in Interview
*slaps*TheNecroswanson said:Werewolves are better! *Runs away giggling*