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I...Vampire
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I...Vampire
I...Vampire (also titled I, Vampire) is a comic book series from DC Comics created by writer J. M. DeMatteis and artist Tom Sutton about a fictional character named Andrew Bennett. The character and storyline originally started as a backup story in The House of Mystery between 1981 and 1983, but was popular enough to become the main feature. The I...Vampire finale was almost book-length.
J. M. DeMatteis pitched the series to editor Len Wein under the title "Greenberg". Wein liked the concept, but rejected the title and suggested "I...Vampire" instead. DeMatteis would later revive the title for his 1985 Marvel Graphic Novel Greenberg the Vampire.
In 1591, after being turned into a vampire himself, Lord Andrew Bennett turned his lover, Mary Seward, into a vampire, and she became corrupted by the power. She took the name Mary, Queen of Blood and created a group of vampires called the Blood Red Moon bent on taking over the world. The series followed Bennett into the modern day as he tried to undo his mistake and take down Mary and the Blood Red Moon.
He was helped by his two companions Deborah Dancer, a beautiful young woman who Bennett saved from Mary at Woodstock (and who was also his girlfriend) and Dmitri Mishkin, a Russian man who Bennett rescued from Mary (and his own mother, turned by Mary) when Mishkin was a child.
To try to keep his humanity, Bennett made a vow to only drink the blood of animals and bottled human blood (which created a subtext of alcoholism). In the original series, Bennett keeps his companions at arm's length, particularly Dancer. For a time, he stays away from them altogether for fear of putting them in danger.
Storylines included Mishkin's quest to find and destroy the vampire who was his mother, Bennett's pursuit of Mary through various time periods leading back to a time before either of them were vampires (motivated on Mary's part by a desire to escape a strange disease killing vampires in the present), and finally an experimental 'cure' for vampirism which leads to the final confrontation between the surviving protagonists and Mary.
Bennett has attempted suicide on several occasions to end his curse, and has also been brought back to life after each attempt due to a higher power, as seen in the 1988 run of Doctor Fate. During this run, we also see Andrew Bennett interact with the Lords of Chaos and Order to seek an end to time, which does occur due to the vampire's involvement, but is later reversed. He also appeared in the 2005 miniseries Day of Vengeance as a background character in the Oblivion Bar, which became the Shadowpact's headquarters. He appears as a supporting character in Doctor Thirteen backup stories in the 2006 miniseries Tales of the Unexpected.
Andrew Bennett has the powers of an elder vampire. He can transform into mist, a bat, and a wolf and has superior strength far beyond that of a mortal man. He is immortal and possesses the ability to turn others into vampires, a healing factor, hypnosis, and limited telepathy. His image cannot be seen, such as being reflected in a mirror or captured on film. He, however, also has the weaknesses of a vampire. He is severely weakened by sunlight, losing most of his vampiric powers, and he can be killed by silver, fire, and/or a wooden stake to the heart.
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I...Vampire
I...Vampire (also titled I, Vampire) is a comic book series from DC Comics created by writer J. M. DeMatteis and artist Tom Sutton about a fictional character named Andrew Bennett. The character and storyline originally started as a backup story in The House of Mystery between 1981 and 1983, but was popular enough to become the main feature. The I...Vampire finale was almost book-length.
J. M. DeMatteis pitched the series to editor Len Wein under the title "Greenberg". Wein liked the concept, but rejected the title and suggested "I...Vampire" instead. DeMatteis would later revive the title for his 1985 Marvel Graphic Novel Greenberg the Vampire.
In 1591, after being turned into a vampire himself, Lord Andrew Bennett turned his lover, Mary Seward, into a vampire, and she became corrupted by the power. She took the name Mary, Queen of Blood and created a group of vampires called the Blood Red Moon bent on taking over the world. The series followed Bennett into the modern day as he tried to undo his mistake and take down Mary and the Blood Red Moon.
He was helped by his two companions Deborah Dancer, a beautiful young woman who Bennett saved from Mary at Woodstock (and who was also his girlfriend) and Dmitri Mishkin, a Russian man who Bennett rescued from Mary (and his own mother, turned by Mary) when Mishkin was a child.
To try to keep his humanity, Bennett made a vow to only drink the blood of animals and bottled human blood (which created a subtext of alcoholism). In the original series, Bennett keeps his companions at arm's length, particularly Dancer. For a time, he stays away from them altogether for fear of putting them in danger.
Storylines included Mishkin's quest to find and destroy the vampire who was his mother, Bennett's pursuit of Mary through various time periods leading back to a time before either of them were vampires (motivated on Mary's part by a desire to escape a strange disease killing vampires in the present), and finally an experimental 'cure' for vampirism which leads to the final confrontation between the surviving protagonists and Mary.
Bennett has attempted suicide on several occasions to end his curse, and has also been brought back to life after each attempt due to a higher power, as seen in the 1988 run of Doctor Fate. During this run, we also see Andrew Bennett interact with the Lords of Chaos and Order to seek an end to time, which does occur due to the vampire's involvement, but is later reversed. He also appeared in the 2005 miniseries Day of Vengeance as a background character in the Oblivion Bar, which became the Shadowpact's headquarters. He appears as a supporting character in Doctor Thirteen backup stories in the 2006 miniseries Tales of the Unexpected.
Andrew Bennett has the powers of an elder vampire. He can transform into mist, a bat, and a wolf and has superior strength far beyond that of a mortal man. He is immortal and possesses the ability to turn others into vampires, a healing factor, hypnosis, and limited telepathy. His image cannot be seen, such as being reflected in a mirror or captured on film. He, however, also has the weaknesses of a vampire. He is severely weakened by sunlight, losing most of his vampiric powers, and he can be killed by silver, fire, and/or a wooden stake to the heart.