Are There Any LGBTQ+ Film Vampires?

2026-06-29 07:51:05 169
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3 Answers

Matthew
Matthew
2026-06-30 23:18:26
Vampires and LGBTQ+ themes? Oh, absolutely. It’s like they’re made for each other—eternal outsiders, living in the shadows, often fluid in their identities. One of my favorites is 'A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night,' this Iranian vampire film with this eerie, poetic vibe. The protagonist, the Girl, has this ambiguous sexuality, and the whole film feels like a love letter to queer loneliness. Then there’s 'The Transfiguration,' a lesser-known indie where a Black queer boy obsessed with vampires grapples with his own violent tendencies. It’s gritty and heartbreaking, but so worth watching.

And how could I skip 'What We Do in the Shadows'? The show’s packed with queer moments—Laszlo and Nadja’s open relationship, Guillermo’s unrequited crush on Nandor—all played for laughs but still validating. Even the original film had Viago pining for Katherine in this awkward, endearing way that felt very queer-coded. Vampire stories seem to naturally lend themselves to exploring desire outside the mainstream, whether through metaphor or outright representation. It’s like the genre’s a mirror for society’s fears and fascinations—and queerness has always been part of that reflection.
Reid
Reid
2026-07-05 17:16:09
If you dig into vampire lore, it’s hard not to notice how often LGBTQ+ narratives pop up. 'Carmilla' predates 'Dracula' by decades and oozes with forbidden sapphic longing. Fast-forward to modern stuff like 'First Kill,' the Netflix series about a vampire and vampire hunter falling in love—it’s cheesy but undeniably queer. Then there’s 'Byzantium,' where Gemma Arterton and Saoirse Ronan play mother-daughter vampires on the run, and their bond feels intensely queer-coded, especially with how they protect each other from predatory men. Even 'Only Lovers Left Alive' has this fluid, bohemian vibe where love and artistry blur lines. Vampires just seem to thrive in stories that defy norms.
Isabel
Isabel
2026-07-05 22:29:58
The world of vampire cinema has actually been pretty queer from the start, whether intentionally or not. Take 'The Hunger' (1983) with Catherine Deneuve and Susan Sarandon—that’s basically a full-on sapphic vampire love story wrapped in sleek 80s aesthetics. It’s dripping with subtext (and literal blood) while exploring immortality and desire. Then there’s 'Interview with the Vampire,' where the dynamics between Lestat, Louis, and Claudia feel like a messed-up, centuries-long polycule. The 2022 AMC series adaptation cranks up the queerness even more, making the romantic tension between Louis and Lestat impossible to ignore. Even older films like 'Dracula’s Daughter' (1936) got banned for 'lesbian undertones'—proof that vampires and LGBTQ+ themes have always been entwined.

More recently, 'Bit' (2019) gave us a trans vampire lead navigating both her identity and a punk-feminist vampire coven. It’s rare to see trans narratives in horror, let alone vampire stories, so that was refreshing. And let’s not forget 'Carmilla,' the web series inspired by Sheridan Le Fanu’s novella, which is basically the OG lesbian vampire tale. It’s wild how these stories keep evolving, from coded subtext to openly queer narratives. Makes you wonder if it’s the immortality thing—vampires get to live outside human norms, which kinda mirrors queer experiences of carving out spaces beyond heteronormativity.
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