He (Adrian Pasdar as Caleb Colton) must admit he likes her (Jenny Wright as Mae) but is still critical of what he's become, after her loving playful bites lead to vampiric transformation.
The sudden shocking discovery of a mobile team menacingly manifested, leads to trepidatious tumult potential incompatibility.
He needs to feed to gain their trust but humanistically can't take lives, resultant vehement disputes suggesting alternative pair bondings.
But she wants him to hang around and freely lets him gourmandize, until there's trouble at a round up and he lets a terrified victim flee.
Mistrust immoderately showcased his life in danger Caleb pleas, before a gallant move reinstates fidelity through hearty cursed chagrined hiatus.
Yet his family's on the move engaged in heartfelt search and rescue, they manage to kindly find him, and introduce novel transfusion.
Back amongst the living regenerated soulful sessions.
The reunion somewhat brief.
Acerbic obfuscation.
Kathryn Bigelow's chilling Near Dark keeps things focused on the present, haunting vampires there may be, but there's little discussion of origins or community.
It's a visceral macabre romance featuring moribund exclusivity, that keeps things raw refreshed immediate impassioned daring bold l'amour.
Endemic confidence upholds spirits as declarations intertwine, direct unflinching pains existence accredited frank anon disclosure.
I'd never heard of Near Dark and was eager to watch Bigelow's take on vampires, co-starring so many Aliens alumni, that may be a cool double feature.
It doesn't create a world like Twilight or revel in myth and legend.
But its forlorn ritualistic candour.
Still facilitates crazed verisimilitude.
Bizarro romance.
Passion.
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