The Scariest Vampires in Movies, Ranked



For decades, vampires have remained Hollywood’s go-to monster movie favorite, with the fanged fiends being reimagined in countless frightening flicks. Some of the entertainment industry’s most talented creators have served up some truly terrifying renditions of the iconic blood-suckers, delivering plenty of thrills and chills to devoted fans of the horror genre. From lauded directors like Francis Ford Coppola and Robert Rodriguez to Guillermo del Toro and Quentin Tarantino, some of the most visionary filmmakers have embraced the vampire trope. Many of these pictures remain beloved cinematic staples that continue to attract new audiences.






Legendary author Stephen King is no stranger to seeing his thrilling novels be adapted, and two of his chilling vampire-themed works were given the Hollywood treatment: Salem’s Lot and The Night Flier. Both films featured nightmare-worthy vampires that have remained permanently etched into the minds of moviegoers across the world. George Clooney became a bona fide superstar when he starred alongside Tarantino in the action horror From Dusk till Dawn, facing off against a reptilian-like-vampire Salma Hayek and her undead minions in the ‘90s hit. Let’s take a peek at some of the scariest vampires in movies.


Update October 17, 2023: This article has been updated with even more terrifying vampires to scare you this Halloween season.





14 SiREN



the title character in the 2016 film Siren
Chiller Films



A spin-off from a segment of the film V/H/S, SiREN tells the same story we saw in the segment. Only with different characters. To call it a spin-off is just wrong. It's just a re-adaptation with a higher budget and with the same vampire monster.



Lilith is the creature that a group of groomsmen kidnap and torture without knowing she's actually a deadly succubus with a thirst for men that she won't exactly disguise. The film works better under a horror anthology concept, but regardless, the Lilith creature is one that will stay with you for a while. She's lethal, beautiful like vampires should always be.



13 Priest



Vampires from film Priest
Sony Pictures Releasing 



Paul Bettany appeared as the eponymous warrior in the 2011 action horror picture Priest, in which the vampire-slaying character takes on the undead after his niece is kidnapped by the creatures and forces him to break his sacred vows in an effort to rescue her. Despite the film itself receiving mixed reviews from critics, there’s no denying that the design of the vampires featured is truly horrific, with the rendition presenting them as eyeless, iridescent-skinned fiends with thin, sinewy bodies and hair-raising mouths with sharp teeth.


Though they are vulnerable to sunlight, the vampires possess immense strength and speed and come in various forms throughout the flick, but the sightless creatures are, without a doubt, the scariest as they viciously attack anything in their path.



12 The Night Flier



The monster in the film The Night Flier
New Line Cinema



Based on the Stephen King short story of the same name, the underrated 1997 horror flick The Night Flier follows competing reporters Richard Dees and Katherine Blair as they team up to investigate a series of grisly murders occurring at rural airports. It doesn’t take long until the duo comes to the terrifying realization that a vampire is causing the bloody massacres, so they join forces to put an end to his carnage.


The disturbing creature goes by the alias Dwight Renfield and is downright nightmare-worthy in his true form, with his giant gaping mouth and jagged fangs, weathered skin, reptilian nose, and mangy hair; it’s no surprise the blood-sucker comes from the imagination of the “King of Horror” himself.



11 Stake Land



fanged creature in the 2010 film stake land
Dark Sky Films / IFC Films



Stake Land is a very underrated film that sees a group of survivors trying to make it in Stake Land, a post-apocalyptic world ridden with vampires and their necessity to conquer everyone as if the thirst for blood were a virus. In the film, vampire creatures don't exactly break the rules of the traditional vampire tropes, but it's their physicality that makes them more upsetting than normal. Yes, they're feral but also slow when they have to be.



10 The Last Voyage of the Demeter



A monster attacks in the last voyage of the demeter
Universal Pictures



In the most recently released entry of the list, the crew of the Demeter aren't aware that they're transporting something unspeakable. One by one, they discover that one of the crates contains a creature that feasts on human blood during the night on a ship that's claustrophobic and very effective in regards to the setting where everything takes place. The creature in The Last Voyage of the Demeter is tangible, anxious, and hungry. The man behind the costume, Javier Botet, is usually known for giving life to unimaginable creatures due to a physical condition that simply allows him to portray otherwordly monsters, and this isn't the exception.



9 From Dusk till Dawn



A group of deformed vampires in film From Dusk till Dawn
Miramax Films



Audiences everywhere couldn’t get enough of director Robert Rodriguez’s 1996 action horror classic From Dusk till Dawn, centering on fugitive bank robber brothers Seth and Richie Gecko (George Clooney and Quentin Tarantino) as they find themselves stuck at a topless bar on the Mexican border crawling with vampires along with a family they took hostage.


Salma Hayek stole the show when she famously portrayed vampire queen Santanico Pandemonium, performing a sexy table-top snake dance and spellbinding the Geckos. Despite Santanico’s initial seductive appearance, she and the saloon’s fellow patrons quickly transform into the undead and launch a vicious attack. Rodriguez based the appearance of the vampires on the Mayan and Aztec mythologies, with Santanico taking on a reptilian look with scales, snake-like eyes, and sharp ears and fangs that became synonymous with the film.



8 Salem's Lot



The vampire Barlow in TV film Salem's Lot
CBS



Stephen King once again knocked it out of the horror park when he created the grotesque vampire Kurt Barlow for his hair-raising novel Salem’s Lot, with the freaky fiend being depicted with parchment-pale skin, a penetrating, yellow gaze, and horrifying sharp fangs so long he cannot shut his mouth.


The creepy character took on this chilling form in the 1979 miniseries and subsequent Salem's Lot adaptations, adding to his overall fright factor due to his lack of speaking and communicating by goosebump-inducing hisses and growls. Barlow sets out to create his very own vampire colony in the Maine town of Jerusalem City, utilizing his supernatural power-possessing human familiar Richard Straker to do his dirty work.



7 Fright Night



amy as a vampire in Fright Night
Columbia Pictures



The easy choice would be Jerry Dandridge in Fright Night, the neighbor that moves next door to Charlie, and has the capacity to put just about everyone under his vampire-like spell. However, we decide to twist it around a bit and picked Amy's transformation as the most unsettling in the film. Charlie's girlfriend is under Jerry's dominion, and he turns her into a multiple-toothed monster with a huge mouth that obviously represents she can eat everyone. Not just bite. Eat. This is proof of the film's terrific makeup effects accomplished by mastermind Richard Edlund.



6 Bram Stoker's Dracula



Bram Stoker's Dracula
Columbia Pictures



The revered Francis Ford Coppola directed the 1992 Gothic horror masterpiece Bram Stoker’s Dracula, bringing the Bram Stoker classic to the silver screen yet again and depicting the iconic Count as he travels to Britain to be reunited with his long-lost love Mina. Coppola’s adaptation is a visually stunning spectacle that brilliantly blends romance with horror, showcasing both Dracula’s tender side and devotion to Mina as well as his grisly true nature as a bloodthirsty beast.



In the absorbing picture, Dracula is portrayed by the dynamite Gary Oldman, flawlessly embodying the notorious villain in all his glory; his true, spine-tingling form includes a bat-like creature with blood-red eyes, grisly face, and decrepit body.



5 Let the Right One In



Oskar with Eli embracing each other in Let The Right one In
Sandrew Metronome



Eli in Let the Right One In isn't scary because of how she looks, but because early on in the film, we know what she can do. She's sweet most of the time, but she can also turn into a feral monster that, after feeding herself, humiliates her familiar by talking harshly to him. Not only that, but the film's final scene will show that Eli's strength goes beyond what we imagined when she beheads and destroys a group of teenagers bullying Oskar.



4 Blade II



the vampire monster in Blade II
New Line Cinema



Wesley Snipes reprised his role as the titular human-vampire hybrid in director Guillermo del Toro’s 2002 superhero film Blade II, this time squaring off against a mutant group of vampires known as Reapers who wish to eradicate the world of both humans and creatures of the night. The genetically-altered monsters possess a virus that can infect both the living and the dead and bite their prey with their stomach-churning three-way jaws and leech-esque sucker tentacles.


The Reapers have an insatiable hunger that causes them to need to constantly feed, turning their victims into a horrible hybrid regardless of if they killed them or not. Del Toro was unimpressed by the romantic idea of "vampires being tortured Victorian heroes" and set out to make them scary again, achieving this goal in spectacular fashion.



3 Daybreakers



fanged monster in the film Daybreakers
Lionsgate / Hoyts Distribution



Ethan Hawke and Willem Dafoe teamed up to save mankind in the 2009 sci-fi action horror flick Daybreakers, in which the former appears as vampire hematologist Edward Dalton, who is attempting to create a blood substitute after the majority of the world's population is turned into the undead. He is visited by former vampire “Elvis” who claims to have a cure that can turn them back to normal and save mankind.


The creatures in the freaky film come in different forms due to the blood shortage, causing disturbing mutations among the newly reanimated, with the worst of the bunch looking emaciated and ghastly with their ribs protruding due to their starvation. Directors Michael and Peter Spierig set out to create the vampires with a classical aesthetic and adopted a more minimalist approach to makeup for a dominant effect.



2 30 Days of Night



Vampire creatures in 30 Days of Night
Sony Pictures Releasing 



Adapted from the comic book miniseries of the same name, the 2007 horror film 30 Days of Night takes place in the Alaskan town of Barrow, where its residents prepare for its annual 30-day-long polar night that will leave them in perpetual darkness for a month. Town sheriff Eben Oleson (Josh Harnett) and his estranged ex-wife Stella make the terrifying discovery that Barrow’s outside communication has been sabotaged just as a vicious band of vampires arrives.


The bloodsuckers in the winter horror picture are downright chilling, as they appear like a cross between a vampire and something demonic with their soulless black eyes and violent, feral demeanor. Their leader, Marlow, only adds to the terror, and the vampire’s fictional language is even more unnerving as they prowl the town in silence as they search for their latest victims.



1 Nosferatu



The 1922 film Nosferatu
Film Arts Guild



With his foreboding gaze, talon-like nails, and sharp pointy teeth, the hunchback Count Orlok was fuel for nightmares when he appeared in the 1922 silent German expressionist horror picture Nosferatu, bringing darkness and mayhem to the fictional town of Wisborg. Though perhaps not as conventionally scary as the others on this list, Count Orlok is the first cinematic appearance of Bram Stoker’s Count Dracula (despite his name change) and is without a doubt the most eerie and unsettling out of all movie vampires.


The iconic shot in which a shadowy Orlok silently creeps up a staircase in search of his victim is ominous, as are the images of actor Max Schreck in all his eerie Nosferatu glory. The silver screen wonder and menacing character remains a highly influential masterpiece and can still send a chill down the spine of anyone who catches a glimpse of stills from the film.

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