One century ago, the writer and member of the secret society "Golden Dawn", the irish man Abraham Stoker, published the maximum epopey about vampirism and, without a doubt, the book of terror more known in the world: Dracula; great combination of credences and superstitions from Europe, the morbid and heroic exploids from medieval prince Vlad Tepes, also the taboos from victorian England.
In 1751 appeared the first cientific book about vampires, tituled "Tratado de las operaciones de espiritus y vampiros en Hungria y Moldavia" by Dom Augustin camlet, benedictin monk. -->The first leterary text was the poem "The bride of Corinto" from Goethe, writed in 1797. Later in 1819, appeared the first tale of vampires "The vampire" from John William Polidori.
Another man that liked the vampires was Arminius Vambrey, an hungarian erudit that traveled around Europe and Asia, compiling all information about vampirism and Vlad, (maybe the first).
Afterwards, appeared the first movie "The vampire" in 1913.
First movie based on Stoker's book: Nosferatu, directed by F. W. Murnau, 1922.
First movie of Dracula: Dracula, directed by Todd Browning, 1931, played by Bela Lugosi.
Son of Dracula from Apple Films, 1973, played by Ringo Starr.
The Lost Boys, 1987 with Jason Patrick.
The first parody of vampires movie for so much came included in the first movie of this gender, Nosaferatu, Eine Symphonie Des Gravens, from german Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, where the count Orlock, played magistrally by Max Schreck, held his own coffin through the street with destiny to his new residence.
Another parodies: "Vamp" with Grace Jones; "Vampire Kiss" with Nicolas Cage and "Fright Night" from Tom Holland. "Fearless Vampire Killers", 1967, played by Roman Polanski.
"Count of Dracula", 1958, directed by Terence Fisher; "Brides of Dracula", 1960; "Kiss of the Vampire"; "Dracula"; "Prince of Darkness" and "Vampire Circus", 1971; "Blood for Dracula", 1973 (Andy Warhol's Dracula); "Vampyres", 1974; "Rabid" from David Cronenberg, 1976; "Lair of the White Worm", from Ken Rusell; "The Hunger", from Tony Scott with Catherine Deneuve, Susan Sarandon and David Bowie; "Salem's Lot", from Tobe Hooper; "Bram Stoker's Dracula" from Francis Ford Coppola.
"Nosferatu" from Werner Herzog, 1979 with Klaus Kinski and Isabelle Adjani.