Sure, Robert Pattinson is hot. We get it. Kellan Lutz is, too. Sure. With the overabundance of sexy vampires in the Twilight movies and in shows like True Blood (yeah, yeah, Alexander Skarsgard), there seems to be a complete bias against those on the other end of the handsome spectrum. To combat the proliferation of "Sexiest Vampires" lists online, we sought the help of vampire expert Meredith Woerner, author of Vampire Taxonomy: Identifying and Interacting with the Modern-Day Bloodsucker and blogger for sci-fi site io9.com, to unearth the fanged men and women who aren't so easy on the eyes. Here, your guide to the famously unattractive vampires ... at least compared to R-Patz.
Read more: Least Sexy Movie Vampires - Pictures of Ugly Vampires in Film - Marie Claire
Jamie Campbell Bower, The Twilight Saga
Despite
the fact that there have already been three movies in the film
franchise, it's not easy to find a mildly unattractive vampire in the
lot. Woerner only offered up the Volturi, namely the white-haired Caius
Volturi, from 2009's New Moon. Not only does his skin tone
blend too seamlessly with his locks, but his red eyes are an
embarrassment next to Edward Cullen's. Plus, unlike his
super-power-wielding Volturi brethren, Caius has no known special power,
which doesn't bode well with the ladies.
Bill Paxton, Near Dark
Paxton
may have started out as a sexy vampire — complete with leather
motorcycle jacket and Ray-Bans — in this 1987 flick (which happened to
be written and directed by recent Oscar winner Kathryn Bigelow), but
Woerner says, "by the end, his character Severen looked more like a
member of the walking dead" than the cute guy from Twister. "A
vicious battle took massive chunks of Severen's face off," she explains.
"Because this particular vampire didn't heal as swiftly as some of the
more modern vamps, he was forced to spend the rest of the movie without
half of his face."
Allan Hyde, True Blood
Much like the Twilight
caliber of cuteness, Woerner says the HBO series sets the bar high for
fanged hotness. So although Hyde's character, the 2,000-year-old
inked-up Godric, isn't repulsive by any means, he sired the hot-tastic
Alexander Skarsgard. Let's be honest: Anyone standing next to that fine
piece of immortal ass just pales in comparison.
Corey Feldman, Bordello of Blood
The '80s golden boy had already starred in the cult vampire hit The Lost Boys
by the time he signed on to play Caleb Verdoux in the 1996 flick about a
brothel for bloodsuckers, but he still hadn't learned how to up his
sexiness the second time around, Woerner notes. If it wasn't the burned
skin and missing front teeth that put the nail in the coffin of
potential hotness, it was the nose ring and side burns.
David Arquette, Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Before Buffy
became a hit TV show filled with super-hot '90s-era vampires like Spike
and Angel, Courteney Cox's hubby starred in the 1992 movie version.
Woerner's interpretation? "His character, Benny, changed from a lazy
friend of Luke Perry's to a white-faced, pointy-eared bloodsucker who
can hover above the ground and claw at your bedroom window." Hot.
David Bowie, The Hunger
The
normally hot rocker and actress Catherine Deneuve made an exceptionally
gorgeous vampire pair in this 1983 flick. "Unfortunately for Bowie, his
human blood stream was not able to survive after being mixed with
Catherine's vampiric qualities," Woerner notes. "After living with
Deneuve for a few years in a timeless party of blood and shower sex,
Bowie begins to age … rapidly." Eventually he turns into a dusty corpse
and, though still alive, spends his days trapped in a coffin in the
attic. So, in addition to not looking so nice, he probably doesn't smell
good, either.
Eddie Murphy, Vampire from Brooklyn
Woerner
chalks up Murphy's inclusion in this list as yet another sufferer of
the angry uglies. When you got on his nerves in this 1995 Wes Craven
comedy, people got "a face full of a yellow-eyed, bumpy-foreheaded
demon."
Gary Oldman, Dracula
"While Winona Ryder may have preferred him in his much more human shell, Gary Oldman took on several disgusting forms in Bram Stoker's Dracula,"
Woerner says of the 1992 film — in which he also rocked quite the
widow's peak in all of his wigs. "He went from a wolf man to a bat
creature to a dog-faced monster who cried black tears in one week
alone."
Gerard Butler, Dracula 2000
The
Scottish actor may have been an unstoppable sex magnet as the title
character of this 2000 film, but "when he showed his true colors things
got ugly," Woerner says of Butler, who was shirtless and having sex for
most of the movie. "Not really ugly, but just kind of scary."
Grace Jones, Vamp
Although
the Jamaican-American singer and model played a vampire queen in this
1986 film, Woerner added her to this list likely because she too closely
resembled the demonic clown from Stephen King's It.
Isabel Lucas, Daybreakers
The
Australian soap opera star is probably best known for her model-worthy
looks, but in the 2009 movie about a plague that transformed almost
every human into a vampire, she doesn't fare as well. Although this
particular shot isn't Lucas herself, "let's just say, the hungrier she
got, the more similar these two became," Woerner says.
Josh Hartnett, 30 Days of Night
He
is clearly hot enough to have dated the likes of Penélope Cruz and
Scarlett Johansson, but in this 2007 movie about an Alaskan town that's
attacked by a bloodthirsty gang of vampires, he shows a different side.
"After injecting himself with the dark vampire blood, he starts to
immediately change from the cute boy next door into a black-eyed,
claw-handed demon with monster strength and a mouth full of razor sharp
teeth," says Woerner, adding that you have to see the film to get the
full effect.
Kiefer Sutherland, The Lost Boys
"Don't
let the '80s 'do fool you," Woerner insists. "Kiefer could be pretty
hot when he wanted to be, until you got him angry." The modern-day Jack
Bauer starred as David (alongside the Coreys, Corey Feldman — who also
makes this list — and the late Corey Haim) in this 1987 vampire party
flick. "When pissed, David would break out the yellow fever vampiric eye
along with the fairly common rumpled vampire brow, making him look like
a pale Hell beast."
Luke Goss, Blade II
According
to Woerner, this 2002 sequel introduced a new kind of vampire: a
vampire hybrid. Sadly, mixing up vampire DNA doesn't give you the
glittery Twilight effect one might have hoped. In the case of
Goss and his hybrid pals, "it caused them to lose their hair and what
little skin color they had, and it also allowed them to snap their jaws
wide open like some sort of insect," Woerner says. "It is terrifying."
Max Schreck, Nosferatu
The
character, Count Orlok, from this classic 1922 black and white vampire
film, is celebrated as one of the most terrifying vamps of all time. "It
was a combination of the manner in which he walked, lurched, and clawed
across the screen along with his beady little eyes and a mouth full of
mangled fangs that helped this monster leave his mark as one of the
scariest to ever grace the silver screen," Woerner says.
Nicolas Cage, Vampire's Kiss
The
action star had an encounter with a neck-biter in this 1988 film, but
"No one really knows if Cage's character, Peter Loew, was ever actually
bitten by a vampire," Woerner admits. "What we do know was that he
believed it and went from high-level, power-suit-wearing executive to
crazed club kid killer who slept under his overturned couch and wore
giant plastic costume fangs."
Parker Posey, Blade: Trinity
Woerner
can't help but think the indie actress "looks badass" (not to mention
her pearly whites looking downright perfect) in the 2004 flick, but her
curlicue bangs could definitely use some reconsideration before she
makes it to vampire sex symbol status.
Reggie Nalder, Salem's Lot
Whether
fans like it or not, this vampire in the 1979 TV miniseries carried on
the tradition of the Nosferatu-style frontal fangs, says Woerner. "Pair
that with his blue-skin, puss-colored eyes, and bat-wing ears and you've
got one ugly monster."
Tom Cruise, Interview with the Vampire
Sure,
Jerry Maguire spent the majority of his screen time in Anne Rice's
screenplay-turned-blockbuster dressed in frilly jackets with long,
flowing blond hair. Could be considered mildly sexy, depending on one's
taste. But when Brad Pitt and Kirsten Dunst try to kill him by slicing
him open and throwing him in a swamp, his character, Lestat, "fed off
the blood of the alligators, snakes, and all the putrid life of the
Mississippi," Woerner says of this scene (not pictured) from the 1994
flick. "This turned him into a hideous, and slightly green, monster for a
brief moment or two."
Willem Dafoe, Shadow of the Vampire
If Max Schreck from Nosferatu made the list, Dafoe — who played Max Schreck in a 2000 movie about the method-acting-to-the-extreme making of Nosferatu — must as well, Woerner says.
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