Twilight
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What could the vampires do instead of sparkle?
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Shamma8
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Aug 10, 2012 07:26AM

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isnt that what the guy done who wrote the Abreham Lincoln book> (been awhile since i read it) but couldnt they go out in the sun just had to wear sunglasses....maybe im wrong it has been awhile

So I totally haven't read the books, just have seen the super cheesy movie. And it was my impression that they just wore sunblock.

Actually, the older a vampire gets (in the Abraham book), the more they can tolerate the sun on their skin. New vampires must stay hidden. The sunglasses is because their eyes are still sensitive after hundreds of years.


Was it? I haven't seen yet. But I'm sure I will eventually. Now that you have me thinking about it, I didn't really hear a lot about it after it came out..."
It should be considered a B movie. Had I of gone and expected a B movie, I would of liked it more. :( It was meh.

Or they could shrivel up and turn into Gollum (from LOTR).
OR their noses grow really long!

i never even thought of it like that

i knew it was something similar to that like i said its been a while since i read it and i didnt like it so it didnt stick with me much haha but yea i didnt go see the movie since i didnt like the book i didnt wanna spend 8.50 for a movies i knew i wouldnt like

I really miss the show Mick St John was played by Alex O' Loughlin he currently stars in Hawii five-0

Magic venom...really?
I liked Richelle Meads idea for her 'nice' vampires. They do weaken and eventually burn in the sunlight but it takes quite a while. They have a very low tolarence for UV and their undead counterparts can't stand it at all. They go up in smoke.
It would have been intresting if the sun made them appear as horrible ugly monsters, sort of like in Pirates of the Caribbean where the moonlight shows the pirates as skeletons.

I like that idea (the sunlight shows their dark side). It would be a good twist, and much better then the sparkle.

Probably wouldn't have made a great love story though...lol

Of course you're entitled to your opinion, but I just think that alot of those explanations you felt were lacking - as I'm sure many people did - are all because you have this preconceived idea of what vampires have to be. And the great thing about fantasy is that there aren't any limits. There's nothing that a vampire has to be to be plausible because the entire idea of the vampire is completely made up in the first place.
I sort of like how it's treated in Twilight because she does address all the stereotypical vampire stuff, but it's mostly all myth. Which actually makes more sense to me because after centuries and centuries, people are bound to get some misconceptions. Especially when anyone who knows any real vampires are either killed or turned into one.
I'm right there with you, wanting things to make sense, but there's more leniency in fantasy. It doesn't all have to be scientific and fitting into what we know, to work. Because then, logically, you should be demanding how vampires can exist at all.

You see, I thought the explanation was reasonable enough for me as fantasy novels go. The venom and the transformation itself changed the molecular/cellular structure of the vampire's whole body, making each cell into a substance like rock. Some rocks have shimmery qualities (like diamond and some rocks have flecks of shiny). I bought it more than the "burn to ash" scenario because vampires are supposed to be inhumanly strong and hard to kill. Burning up just from sunlight seems pretty weak to me. Of course, the only vampire book I had ever read before Twilight was Interview with a Vampire, so I was probably able to suspend disbelief a little easier with Twilight.




I feel like you can always explain what I'm trying to say so much better than I do, lol But yes, exactly!

Their eyes do glow red if they drink human blood, but the Cullens are vegetarians. (You probably already knew that but still.)

I'm not following your reasoning here. Usually, it's lazier to follow tradition than to come up with something on your own.
Some of the traditions I don't like. The whole "having to be invited into the house" thing isn't a biologically based characteristic. How can a place be forbidden if you do not have permission from the owner? How is this internal law enforced and why does it exist? This adds a non-scientifically based restriction that doesn't really make sense (unless you think in terms of traditional religious thinking of sin needed to be "invited in" or otherwise encouraged). If you are looking to construct more science-based vampires whose characteristics make sense to the ideas of natural selection and evolution, that would have to go, along with burning in the sun. Burning in the sun reduces vampires to one of the weakest and most vunerable species on the planet. Burning and dying in the sunlight (a condition which would mean that they are vunerable much of the time) would be too much of a handicap. In pre-science times, it would make sense. I think the message being that vampires are evil and that a condition usually thought of as life-affirming and necessary is deadly to them. It's another indication of the un-naturalness of vampires that all other things need sunlight while it destroys them on contact.
I prefer a condition which reflects a difference between humans and vampires that becomes apparent in strong sunlight. This doesn't mean that I'll turn my nose up at more traditionally based stories, but I think that the sunlight burning is too often used as a lazy plot device to destroy the vampire at the last minute. It's like the Wicked Witch of the West suddenly melting from water. It's an "easy out".

You can roll science and magic into one with any supernatural creature. The La Push wolves don't get scrutinized as much as the vampires because their existence is explained as being part magic part genetics.
SM tried to go all science with the vampires which was a bad idea. And I've always wondered why the vampires in Twilight never tried to take over the world. If they're so indestructable and humans are so weak it would be easy for them.


What do you mean when you say she "tried to go all science with the vampires"?
I don't think that "taking over the world" would really fit into the ambitions of the vampires. What would taking over the world get them but headaches? Their food (humans) do all the work of maintaining things. There's no need to step in and take over. What would be the benefit of that? Humans are not a threat to vampires, particularly since most have no idea of the actual situation and there is no threat of the food dwindling or becoming aware.

Even Bram Stokers Dracula could go out in the daylight. The fact that vampires can burn in daylight was someones twist or addition to that "legend". Someone just made it up. Dracula could be killed by silver bullets. Something that is refered to more in killing werewolves. He was also hypnotic and had telepathic abilities. Most vampires now a days arent telepathic and its a total toss up if they can hypnotise or not. Dracula could shape shift into a bat, dog, wolf or fog. If we were to talk about legend, you can see parts of one of the original and I would venture to say one of the most well known vampires has been cherry picked apart. Some of it has been cherry picked and added to an entire different species.
The fact that more things that are being made up about vampires to this day isn't so unbelievable. Is venom such a far fetched thing from the already made up version that if a vampire bites you and drains your blood and shares theirs they can turn you? Venom makes more sense to me. It's certainly more effient and less magical.

I'm not following your reasoning here. Usually, it's lazier ..."
okay i didnt read all ur comment but just a few sentances. u said u didnt like the whole gotta be invited in the only reason that theory has became so popular it gives ppl the sense of protection

i agree with the garlic thats the one i never liked

Protection from what? Vampires aren't real.

First, every vampire myth in the world agrees that vampires prefer to hunt humans. That makes them, in effect, apex predators in our ecosystem.
These predators would hunt at a time when we're at our most vulnerable: night. Our eyes aren't as adapted to the darkness, and we sleep at night. Burning in sunlight actually works here, because an aversion to sunlight might develop after a time due to prolonged avoidance of daylight hunting, which could make skin increasingly vulnerable to UV rays.
Being predators, vampires would do everything possible to adapt to our environment so as to blend in and avoid detection. That way, they can continue to hunt and survive.
So, using that rationale, any adaptation they would make that stands out would get that particular mutation hunted down, staked and burned as rapidly as possible.
All of that feels perfectly rational and reasonable, right?
Therefore, an adaptation/mutation that causes vampires to sparkle in sunlight, and therefore stand out from their prey in any way, would get them hunted down and killed as fast as possible, making Meyer's vampires some of the juiciest Van Helsing fodder ever created.
...which makes Meyers one of the stupidest vampire "authors" ever. Scientifically speaking.

I may not like some books, but every piece of writing is important. writing takes time, and i hate it when people say that they have no idea how something got published because it was stupid, it's not. someone must've liked the book and writing for it to get published! People don't just publish books, they read it first!
And people can joke about books and not mean it, and that's okay, but when someone says something like someone's writing is stupid, do you know how annoying that is! A lot of people should know what i'm talking about. Because no one's writing is stupid it might not be your kind of book. enough said.
-Not directing this at one person, just saying in general.

First, every vampire myth in the world agrees that vampires prefer to hunt humans. That makes ..."
well, you do understand that neither adaptation nor mutation has anything to do with a "species" that doesn't reproduce? (yeah, yeah, I know- renesmee...but, as a rule, they don't reproduce)
you do not have a situation of generations of vampires being subject to natural selection- they're turned, not born. so, while reasonable and rational in a discussion about tigers, I don't think your argument holds water when it comes to vampires.

you do not have a situation of generations of vampires being subject to natural selection- they're turned, not born. so, while reasonable and rational in a discussion about tigers, I don't think your argument holds water when it comes to vampires. "
Why aren't you considering that turning a human to a vampire is their form of reproduction?
No matter which mechanic you use to explain it (supernatural or scientific), you are basically making a new vampire, with certain innate traits and abilities derived from the parent vampire. Passing on traits that will get the fledgling leech stake'n'baked won't do much for the continuation of the species... something that Meyers was just too lazy or stupid (I'm voting option b) to take into account.

First, every vampire myth in the world agrees that vampires prefer to hunt humans. That makes ..."
Bill, you make an interesting point, but your conclusion is faulty. I've never heard of an adaptation as extreme as dying in sunlight. Adaptations help to adjust to the environment. If you set side by side the adaptations of burning (and dying) in the sunlight and sparkling in the sunlight, the former is obviously a bigger weakness. I could see, if the development was a reaction to the sun, that the skin might sparkle, not that it would burst into flames.
However, Kirby makes an excellent point about natural selection not applying because becoming a vampire is more like a virus (which mutates in order to survive). This leads to the idea that, perhaps, in Meyer's world, there were two separate sets of vampires: the burning ones and the sparkling ones. It stands to reason that the burning ones, with an adaptation that causes such an extreme reaction, probably died out, leaving the sparkling ones. Or another scenario, if all the world had burning vampires and the virus mutated to lessen the severity of the reaction (from burning to sparkling), such a thing would obviously be a benefit to the species, causing them to survive longer and to infect more people with the mutated virus, leading the vampire traits to change over time. In these scenarios, Meyer's vampires are actually an improvement on the original, a mutation that helps them survive better in their environment than the ones that die.




The Dracula legend is 100 years old. I think you'll find vampire legends are a little older than that.
There is not a single plausable reason for vampires to sparkle in sunlight. For undead monsters to have a weakness of some kind works. Some authors have said that the reason vamps don't like silver is because Judas was paid 30 silver coins to betray Christ. Even that doesn't mesh completely but at least it's a reason.
Twiligh vampires never had a real reason for sparkling. Their skin is said to be like granet but with a diamond quality to it. Why don't they then sparkle under normal lights? Why don't they get sparkly if you shine a torch on them or when they're around fire?
If it's only UV rays that effect them, does that mean they'll sparkle if they get close to a bug zapper or into a club under the UV strobe lights?
Let's face it. The 'sparkling' was just another way of SM making Edward seem beautiful. She invented him in a dream, I'm sure all things sparkle in her dreams.
Or as Dean Wichcester would say: you know what, there's a ton of lore on unicorns too. In fact, I hear that they ride on silver moonbeams, and that they shoot rainbows out of their asses!

oh, just like a cuttlefish! they hypnotize their prey with crazy (dare I say dazzling?) color displays...very similar idea, I think.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHnm4I...

I don't at all understand that idea that innate traits and abilities are being passed on during the turning process...there is no passing of genetic material, so the parent vampire only has a nurturing influence on the "child." genetics has nothing to do with it, even if it IS their form of reproduction. that seems kind of like someone thinking that by picking and adopting a child, they're passing on their DNA. they may have chosen the child, but he/she still won't inherit any of the parent's genes.
and, even if that DID make sense- as mickey already explained, burning in the sun is a much bigger disadvantage than sparkling.

I'm not going to go back and quote each person, I'll just save time and try to address some points:
1. Camouflage: Someone suggested that a predator with significant advantages in speed and strength doesn't need it to hunt prey. In nature, this doesn't exactly follow: consider a house cat hunting a mouse, with those advantages over its prey. It does hide and allow its prey to come to it, and the most successful hunting cats are the ones that blend in best with their environment (such as grey tabby cats... I had a Maine coon cat that never failed to bring home a fresh kill each night after he went out hunting).
This is just one example out of many. The most efficient strategy for catching food is to let the food come to you, and you're not going to do that by sparkling in the sun and sending up a flare that you're in any way, shape, or form different from your intended prey.
2. The Virus Theory: If a virus can evolve to survive longer in a host (made more antibiotic-resistant, for example), why can't a vampire?
As far as the burning-in-sunlight question... yes, it is an extreme mutation that can limit survivability, if the vampires that have it wander in the daylight. However, again, humans are more alert during the day, so remaining awake at that time to feed would be counter-productive and limit survivability anyway. On top of that, effective sunscreens are relatively inexpensive and provide excellent protection.
Oh, and before I forget... redheads. I've known red-haired people who can spend 3 minutes in the sun and come away with brutal sunburns. It's not exactly unprecedented that sun can be extremely damaging, yet not affect survival.
Just remember: I'm more a proponent of the "vampires rendered powerless in daylight" school of thought. Given that they would hunt when their prey is at its most vulnerable (night), it makes more logical sense than "vampires turn into freakin' disco-balls in daylight."
But who does not want a guy and a disco ball all in one?PARTAY!!!!

Just to requote myself --
"If we were to talk about legend, you can see parts of one of the original and I would venture to say one of the most well known vampires has been cherry picked apart."


I hate all these vamp novels where they talk about immortility like it's something you can buy off ebay.
Immortaility means immunity from death. In other words; something that will never end. And yet, a little naplam will end a vamp in SM's universe. So the sparkling, the powers, the so called immortaility is all just superficial.
It's basically a book of teens deluding themselves.
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