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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
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LearningTranscript
00:04Hey guys, are you going to be a thief or what?
00:05Oh, I'm so hungry!
00:06This is my avatar request
00:07Very nice
00:08What do you like about Najib?
00:09What is the name of the olive oil plant?
00:10Group every day
00:11We want to change
00:13Hey everyone, there's Abdulaplikishn
00:15Chubby baby with fries
00:17With Dracula
00:19Do you love him, Najeeba?
00:20And we drink his blood?
00:20No, we don't want a submarine anymore.
00:22And that's when we'll be stuck on the question of who gets the thigh and who gets the liver.
00:25no
00:26I'm thinking we shouldn't get horma from the Syrian restaurant.
00:28Are you crazy, my son?
00:30This is Nasi Adel from the archives.
00:31The sandwich had water in it
00:33And the first aid for his beard is good health.
00:34Why don't you guys get rid of us? I'm hungry!
00:36What do you say?
00:37They're asking us for blood bags from the emergency room.
00:38Because no one objected
00:39He walked
00:40I want to take two cups of blood, what is Plus?
00:42Yes, I'll request a bag of blood or regular blood.
00:45And one spicy
00:47Look
00:48Get me a bag of B Plus blood
00:51But without the usual embellishment, because of Hamouda
00:53His statement increases the white blood cell count.
00:55The blood is light because of the diet.
00:57Are you always like this, son?
00:59What you're asking for is normal, like everyone else.
01:00What can I say? What can I say?
01:02Okay, I'm asking for something I don't want.
01:04That's enough, Mataht, don't be surprised.
01:05Is this a joke?
01:06Hetch spoke to you
01:07You're difficult, Lamtaht
01:08difficult
01:09Blood shirt, oh hello, not a bloodsucker
01:12Child, that's it.
01:13If you want to fix me
01:15Invite me
01:16You truly possess an amazing personality.
01:18You have no shame
01:19At the same time, your blood is thick
01:20Rita, you'll be born at the hour of patience.
01:22Is He God?
01:32Viewers of the hour, blessings and welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program
01:35In 2022
01:36The famous actress Megan Fox
01:38Of course you know her
01:39And the rock singer Machine Gun Cali addressed her
01:41He appeared in the meeting as a journalist
01:42He gave a strange explanation
01:43Oh my dear, they drank each other's blood.
01:46Before I make a decision, my dear
01:47Megan explained it quickly, the result was like a cake with a few drops
01:49Those are merely objects of inquiry and spirituality between us
01:52But my dear
01:53People's reaction on social media
01:55He was hysterical
01:55I said you're having children and your fiancé
01:57I'm going back to the Middle Ages
01:58I'm staying in Farma Al-Sasin Di.
01:59Of course, my dear
02:00Defeated Comments
02:01I likened them to one person
02:02Dracula
02:03You got what you deserved, my dear.
02:04We are in the age of TikTok and Instagram
02:06The first time we heard about someone drinking blood
02:08Makna went to an old literary figure who was ten years old
02:11The truth is that the character of Dracula, despite being ancient
02:14However, it remained an indelible part of the melody.
02:16This is simply because it has never disappeared.
02:18She was always with us
02:19Movies and TV series
02:20And countless works of art
02:22And there is still a huge audience around the world
02:25He is still enshrined in this character
02:26You can find specialized groups online.
02:28In talking about vampires
02:30She has millions of followers
02:32I want to tell you that some people who are obsessed reach
02:34If they really believe there are real vampires
02:37Not a new Maghreb for the stars
02:39Megan Fox's outfit and engagement
02:40He is telling you that violent incidents have occurred in Africa.
02:42Because of the belief that there are vampires
02:44For example, in 2002 a rumor spread in Malawi
02:47The government is complicit with bloodsuckers.
02:49No catastrophic consequences.
02:51Injuries from the Croats who attacked and killed at least five people
02:54The rumor was that they were bloodsuckers.
02:56Stop right there, Vampara, if you see me, recognize me, and motivate me.
02:58Stay put
02:59It seems that vampire figures are still alive among us.
03:02Our imagination, and sometimes some people, see our reality.
03:05But strangely enough, the most common image we imagine of a scary creature like this
03:08It's a very elegant picture.
03:10You're a fool if you're happy about this now.
03:11You'll see how vampires are portrayed in movies and TV series.
03:14You'll find someone very attractive
03:16Sometimes it's about opening up teenage girls' dreams
03:18For example, if I asked you right now
03:19What image comes to mind when I'm talking to you about vampires?
03:22It will most likely be the handsome Dracula in his elegant suit with his hair neatly combed
03:27You might think of someone like Edwald Cullen from the Twilight film series.
03:30Because of his beauty, elegance, and icy complexion
03:33We imagine it as a Roman statue
03:35But the truth is, this picture isn't original.
03:36The truth is, Aziz, the image of vampires used to be much uglier.
03:39A swollen, rotten cat crawls out of its grave in the middle of the night.
03:44To suck the blood of the victims while they sleep
03:46That dear friend, if you saw him, you would never be able to resist him completely.
03:48And you won't promise anything about his magic, for example.
03:50No, what happened?
03:51How did that terrifying monster suddenly become like Chic politely asking for your blood?
03:55To understand the story, my dear, we need to go back a little.
03:58Specifically for the summer of 1816
04:00This year, my dear, the year was covered in Burkani brocade.
04:03Temperatures have dropped, but the rain and thunderstorms haven't stopped.
04:07What happened, oh my God?
04:08Burkan happened in Mount Tanbura
04:10This volcano destroyed the natural climate.
04:12That's why historians called 1816 the year without a summer.
04:15In this gloomy atmosphere and to escape the vagaries of the climate
04:18A very strange mix of friends came together
04:20In a villa on the shores of Lake Geneva in Switzerland
04:22Who was there, my dear?
04:24Of course, there was the British poet
04:26Lord George Byron
04:27This guy, my dear, was a very trendy man in his time
04:29A famous star and his reputation
04:31The scandals, and he was with his friend, the poet Bres Chile.
04:34And his lover, the well-known writer Mary Goodall
04:36Who will be the next one, my dear?
04:38Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein
04:40And protect yourself, you're repeating yourself
04:41I heard about this gathering more than three times on the Dabke program.
04:44Among them is the Frankenstein episode
04:45Even Susan Marie came up with the idea of Frankenstein from this gathering.
04:48First of all, my dear, I'm pleased that you're focused and watching the episodes.
04:50But be careful, I won't leave this meeting.
04:52Just one monster
04:53In the same gathering, among the invited guests, was a young man of twenty years old.
04:56His name was John Polidori, the physician
04:58And the close friend of Lord Byron
05:00Byron, my dear, suggest an entertaining game for them.
05:02Each one will write a short scary story
05:04We see that she is the best one
05:05Of course, my dear, everyone is excited in this strange atmosphere.
05:08This challenge has its day, my dear Mary, I wrote
05:10Frankenstein, as you know
05:11John Polidori, Byron's physician, attempted to write a story about one of six.
05:14What is Bras Junjuma doing? She's chasing six.
05:16Secondly, because he was spying on a man.
05:18The idea made Mary say to him, "God bless the idea!"
05:20This asphalt and the rest of the group received their share.
05:22What happens is that our friend gets frustrated
05:24He throws out the idea, but during his frustration
05:26His entire gaze is focused on Byron
05:28This is because this young man's relationship with Byron was a relationship
05:30The relationship between infatuation and jealousy is complex and intricate.
05:32Polidori was an ambitious young man who had
05:34He claims to be a literary figure and wants to prove himself.
05:36It's easy to hear these big things, but unfortunately
05:38He wasn't a humble man.
05:40No, he was dealing with him.
05:42He acted arrogantly, like a friend's servant.
05:43This made Polidori feel jealous and pressured.
05:46Mohammed, I feel like you're withdrawing from the conversation about
05:48personal matters
05:49Where's the talk about the funfair I came to attend for?
05:51His name is Aziz, let me explain: Byron in the midst of the challenge
05:53He wrote a short story about a young Englishman who had a friend who was a bit of a jerk.
05:56The friend who's been wronged will turn out to be the one who's wronged in the end.
05:58Tonight, the first modern story is born.
06:00About a brain-sucking bugger, but dear
06:02Byron's incomplete birth was the subject of the story
06:05And he didn't finish it here, Polidori
06:06Bass said, "I'm taking the general guidelines."
06:08From Byron's story, and I completed it in my own way.
06:10From my personal perspective, because of this year
06:122019 publishes a story
06:14The story, my dear, is about a young man named
06:16Aubrey travels with Lord Ruthen
06:18The Lord is going on a European tour
06:20Bigoy is an innocent girl and her life is ruined
06:22And then he'll make them cut off from the roads, and the lord is here.
06:24He gets injured and dies, that's all, my dear.
06:26Before he dies, he binds Aubrey to a very strange promise.
06:29Don't you dare tell anyone
06:30To die for a year and rise
06:32Aubrey, the kind and naive one, agreed
06:34So that he would discover after a while that the lord who was the subject
06:36He came back to life and changed his name to Winawi
06:38He marries his younger sister, but the problem is...
06:40His commitment to his promise prevented us from saying it was necessary.
06:43At the end of the story, Aubrey is kind and dies.
06:44And Lord Ruthen or Traccula wins the round
06:46The story, my dear, achieved great popularity.
06:48It also appears that she achieved Polidori's revenge.
06:51If you noticed the vampire character in this episode
06:52Lord Ruthen is written in a very similar style.
06:54For Byron, but just as Polidori imagined him
06:57Lord Aniq and mysterious
06:58But he is also arrogant and destructive.
07:00For those around them, just like I heard Byron
07:02At that time, the hashtag was intentional and followed by something else.
07:04Byron wasn't just an inspiration for the story,
07:06That was the purpose of the writing. Well done, Abu Hamad!
07:08That's not revenge against him, unfortunately, my dear Byron.
07:10The people were victorious; they loved the story very much.
07:12But they twisted his needs in their minds, that Madam Rethven
07:14Byron's likeness remains, of course, Byron is
07:16The one who wrote the story is here.
07:17The entire writing process, even the magazine that published the story, took it from him.
07:20I didn't write Polidori's name on it.
07:22There's talk, my dear, that the magazine is forbidden.
07:24Why did they create this burnt product? So it would sell better.
07:26Of course, here's Polidori, the pure madness of the magazine.
07:28He told them, "This is my story, brothers."
07:30But no one believed me, I preferred people for many years.
07:32I remember that Byron is the author of the story.
07:34Why? Because Byron was simply the star of his era.
07:36Superstar, I'm a big one, but
07:38Polidori was just an unknown young man, and indeed
07:40Polidori is not achieving success
07:41And he remains, my dear, even in his revenge, my love.
07:44Byron remained in a state of depression due to
07:46Bion Alamar committed suicide in the name of cyanide
07:48How old is he? Only 25 years old.
07:50But from this cruelty, a new image was born.
07:52The bloodsucker monster emerged from his grave
07:54It remained a symbol of attraction, mystery, and danger.
07:56Polidori, the amateur writer
07:58The one who was not yet 20 years old
08:00He changed literature forever with his story
08:02Where, my dear, do we need to ask what exactly they did?
08:04To transform Vampire Byron from a featureless story
08:07The flag has immense popularity.
08:09Extending across the ages and immortalized
08:10In dozens of films and TV series
08:12According to the British historian Christopher Frayling
08:14Polidori simply took all the popular attention
08:17And the legends that were spread in the villages
08:19And the countryside is divided into two parts.
08:20He gathered them and arranged them into one coherent story.
08:23It's like a chef invented a dish in a catalog.
08:25It's clear, and all the books after it learned from it.
08:27And they kept changing its details
08:28But the basic food is
08:29The word Damfire itself entered the English language
08:32Around 1734
08:33When stories of corpses spread
08:35Emerging from the graves in Eastern Europe
08:37Tales that Europeans considered mere myths
08:40Stories that emerged from imagination
08:42Transylvanian and Serbian peasants
08:43Until they brought the league in 1816
08:46And once his story was revealed
08:48The vampire emerged from his clothes
08:49The monstrous legendary figure
08:51He remained a complex fictional character
08:53Educated, sophisticated, and elegant
08:55He has charisma and charm, but at the same time
08:57Evil, murderous, and bloody
08:59From that day on, vampires became cultured characters.
09:01And she used it to become poetic figures.
09:03She possesses an intellectual depth akin to that of a lord.
09:05And the poets of the Romantic movement
09:07Which spread in the 19th century
09:08Romantic, Abu Hamad, you said Lord Byron?
09:10He was a terrible and evil person
09:12Romance here means the kind of love that comes with being a baby.
09:14The 19th century was the age of enlightenment and rationality.
09:17The dream of progress, manufacturing, and medicine is an environment of myths.
09:20But this rationality was a bit excessive.
09:22That's why the Romantic movement emerged
09:23Considering it a reaction
09:25A literary and artistic image that focuses on the hypothesis
09:27Nature and its relationships, and at this moment
09:29Logic and rationality
09:31This move comes about to glorify
09:33The intense emotions of the new science
09:35He tried to marginalize her and is trying to reject her.
09:37Because it makes people fall
09:39In the pit of belief in superstition
09:41Among the most famous pioneers of Romanticism are poets
09:43Ziy Pierce Chilli, Jota, and Byron himself
09:45Polodori when he created his hero
09:47With the same specifications, it's similar to Byron.
09:48His story resonated deeply with people's moods at the time.
09:51A sticky residue of logic and rationality
09:53The one who explains everything around them
09:54And they went looking for dark, mysterious, and poetic stories.
09:57We need to feel something now, enough with the science.
09:59What's this about? You'll find someone like this romantic hero.
10:01A young man from Ghana, but he has a painful condition.
10:03Living alone in the darkness
10:05Despite the fact that there are many people around him
10:06Hey, my dear, romantic, poetic vampire mix
10:09Perhaps the most dangerous thing Poldori did
10:11He was the first one to directly hit that character with seduction and charm.
10:14In his story, he's a vampire who exploits his attractive appearance.
10:17So that he can live his life
10:19Lord Rothle, for example, was decided by innocent girls.
10:22He plays the role of the ideal guardian in front of their families.
10:24And when the wedding moment arrives, it's the most beautiful moment.
10:27The girl is waiting for it, then suddenly it transforms
10:28He kills her and sucks her blood.
10:30Poludori took that romantic moment and turned it into a nightmare.
10:33I wish, my dear, that the formula that made
10:34The vampire character is both attractive and terrifying.
10:36At the same time, up to today
10:37Also, my dear, other elements appeared in this story.
10:39It will be considered a fundamental element in vampire literature.
10:42For example, you might find he has dark pictures of distant foreign countries.
10:44The presence of a narrator is not always reliable.
10:46Like my grave, which falls victim to deception.
10:48The idea of the cursed oath that prevents the hero from speaking
10:51Or change his fate
10:51These elements are derived from a popular literary genre of that time called
10:54Gothic literature is a type of novel.
10:56It mixes horror with romance
10:58He focuses on mysterious places like abandoned walls.
11:00Haunted monasteries play on fear
11:03From the past and the unknown, and he raises questions
11:05What would happen if the past didn't die?
11:07What will happen if the sins of our ancestors are still alive in our blood?
11:09And that, my dear, is exactly what brain suckers represent.
11:12A monster rises from its grave to remind you
11:13The past still exists as a curse and a curse
11:16Lord's character here was the perfect archetype of the melancholic romantic hero
11:20The one that people love and fear at the same time
11:22But the truth is, my friend, that Poldori didn't create the monster in a vacuum.
11:25It is the creation of a new version of a very ancient mythical creature.
11:27It has existed in the heritage of peoples for thousands of years
11:30In Mesopotamia, from about five thousand years ago
11:33The Sumerians and Assyrians were terrified of the Ekemo ghosts.
11:36These were the souls of people who died without being buried.
11:38These spirits return to take revenge on the living and drain their life energy.
11:41Or other ghosts that hear the sound of the cat
11:43This is someone who died and was forgotten.
11:44No one offered him sacrifices
11:45Nobody acknowledged his mother
11:47He comes back angry and insults people
11:48Some of them were even described with a terrifying term.
11:50Seven are they who grind the earth like wheat
11:53They pour out human blood like rain.
11:55In ancient Egypt, there was also a terrifying legend about blood.
11:58The god Ra is angry with humans
11:59And he sold his daughter to the fierce lioness Sekhmet in order to raise them.
12:02You've really got a big fever, my dear, over human blood.
12:05She preferred to drink blood until she wiped out all of humanity.
12:08But at the last moment, the Egyptian priests deceived her.
12:10They placed a large quantity of blood-red beer in front of her.
12:13Sekhmet drank it and became drunk and fell asleep
12:15And humanity was saved by beer.
12:17The Egyptians at that time would celebrate the Red Goat Festival annually.
12:20And the young man drank beer to celebrate their escape from Sekhmet's wrath.
12:23If you knew its meaning better, you might see it in the stands.
12:25Written by Mahmoud Al-Fahr, not a supermarket
12:27Human beings are also present in India, my dear.
12:28The Legend of the God Kali
12:30The one who entered into a battle with Ashtan Ratshabija
12:32The one who had a very strange power
12:34Every drop of blood that falls from him onto the ground turns into a new winter.
12:36And in order to defeat him, Kali drinks all the blood before he reaches Earth.
12:40The problem is that the strength of this blood caused her to enter a state of violent madness.
12:43Until God saw her and intervened and guided her.
12:45In conclusion, almost all civilizations viewed blood as the secret of life.
12:49That's why their imagination always created spirits or creatures that drank blood.
12:52So that you can draw strength from it and live forever.
12:55This could be the origin of the vampire concept in all of human history.
12:58And it continued in later centuries in different forms and shapes, for example in Europe in the eighteenth century.
13:02Between 1221 and 1733, vampire hysteria spread.
13:06As I told you, especially in areas like Serbia and Transylvania
13:09Many people believed that the dead woke up at night and drank the blood of their neighbors.
13:13Anyone who died suddenly, they would open their grave.
13:14Even if his body wasn't completely decomposed
13:17They were saying he was a vampire
13:18Then, my dear, a poor man will get up, take a wooden stake, and drive it into his heart.
13:22Or they cut off his head or burned the entire body.
13:24To ensure that it doesn't get up completely
13:26The government, in its misdeeds, sent doctors to explain to the people
13:29Why is it taking so long to decompose this body? Is it because of the cold?
13:32The swelling or puffiness you saw is just normal.
13:35Gradually, people were convinced and their hysteria subsided.
13:38But the vampire legend didn't end with the end of this episode.
13:48In 1845, a popular story appeared in England called
13:51Varney the Vampire
13:52Followed on episodes in cheap print
13:54And it spread unchecked at that time
13:56It's like Mohamed Ramadan's new series
13:58Everyone sees it
13:59And with her, the character The Vampire entered every home.
14:02Varni became a trend of his time
14:03And he was able to establish details that became essential in two dimensions.
14:05For the first time, the victim is under her supervision.
14:07On two small bones where the bite occurred
14:09Varney also had abilities like hypnosis.
14:12and superhuman strength
14:12He is extraordinary, Abu Ahmad
14:14If the sun were to rise in the morning, it would scatter you.
14:15My dear, wait for the sun's dialogue, it hasn't even appeared yet.
14:18Let me tell you that after Varni, I got a very different sole.
14:201872
14:22Irish writer Sherry Dalnovano
14:23He published a short story called Carmela
14:25What's new here is that the main fanboy this time
14:27She's not a man.
14:29The story about Carmela
14:30a beautiful mysterious girl
14:31A chance encounter enters the life of a young woman named Laura and befriends her.
14:34Over time, Laura begins to weaken and tire.
14:36And she has nightmares about a creature
14:38About money slowly suffocating her while she sleeps
14:40In the end, they discover that Carmella herself is a vampire.
14:42And she was sucking Laura's blood at night
14:44She was sleeping on small balls
14:46And as always happens, my dear, avoid it.
14:48A few men are harassing Laura's father and killing Carmela.
15:00Genuine feelings towards her greeting, Carmela
15:02It's not just a monster that spends its time
15:03No, she loves Laura and is insanely jealous of her.
15:05And I want it for her alone.
15:07A complex personality with frightening love, jealousy, and possessiveness
15:10Of course, my dear, I don't need to tell you that the novel was very daring.
15:12They considered her to be in a moral scandal.
15:14In the time of conservative Victorian society
15:16But today Carmela is considered a classic.
15:18Powerful and romantic horror literature
15:20Because of her, the vampire remained a more humane and romantic character.
15:24And my dear vampire was the one we know today
15:25It is an addition from many books over a long period of time.
15:28Polidori brought the monster out of the grave
15:30He wore a suit and tie.
15:31Barney made him a popular hero and a weekly TV series
15:34It follows on the description of a piaster
15:35Carmela brought a touch of mystery, femininity, and romance.
15:38To the great Irish writer Bram Stoker
15:40What year? 1897
15:42He took all these ingredients, my dear, and put them in the blender.
15:45Katt wrote one novel that went down in history
15:47Dracula
15:48Dear, the novel became so popular that people forgot it was written 80 years after the story of Polidori.
15:52Galban created the story about Count Dracula of Transylvania.
15:55Those who decide to take England in an unconventional way
15:58Instead of armies, he turns victims into vampires.
16:00He spreads his curse throughout British society.
16:02But a group of heroes led by Professor Pan Helsing
16:06Peterdow between England and Transylvania
16:08The novel, my dear, is full of symbols that reflect the fears of Victorian society.
16:1119th century
16:13The first clear symbol is the fear of the invading stranger.
16:15Dracula from the Wild East
16:17The next number is that of the civilized West.
16:19This reflects the fear the English had at that time of foreigners and immigrants.
16:22The one that is still going on until now
16:23The second symbol, my dear, is the fear of women's liberation.
16:25Dracula transforms the well-behaved women in the story into savage and seductive creatures.
16:30It's as if the novel is warning that if women are given too much freedom
16:33It will turn into winter
16:34Oh God, protect us, Abu Ahmed, please
16:36Keep the woman with you, don't let her claim freedoms, or she'll turn against you.
16:38He doesn't want to see her like that.
16:39That's not all, my dear.
16:40There is a class code
16:41Also in the story
16:42The aristocratic count
16:43Someone who literally lives off the blood of poor people
16:45They represented the nobility class that sucked the blood of the people.
16:48Most likely, the dear Branstocker himself
16:49He wasn't focused on all those symbols while he was writing.
16:51He wanted to tell a captivating story that would enthrall people.
16:53Influenced by folk tales from Transylvania
16:56For example, the special case of Phil Dynebloor
16:57Villad Al-Makhwaza
16:58The one who was famous in the fifteen villages
17:00He impales his enemies.
17:02Should we tell you that when the Dracula novel came out, it didn't cause a stir?
17:04But when cinema emerged, it became very popular.
17:07Pete is the primary reference for all vampire images thereafter.
17:10From the day it was published in 1897
17:12It never stopped being cooked
17:14And from that time on, my dear Dracula, he became
17:16A true cultural icon
17:18With the dawn of the twentieth century
17:19Cinema has begun to present us with vampires in a visual way.
17:22terrifying corpse-like creature
17:23Bald, deaf, and a tank
17:25Long teeth like a mouse
17:26It's closer to the shape of the stabbings that terrified people at the time.
17:28Because of the world wars and widespread destruction
17:30The film also repeats a new idea
17:32The idea became a rule after that.
17:33The sun burns and kills the vampire.
17:35Abu Hamid kept saying, "Take care of your vitamin supplements."
17:38Because she definitely has a vitamin D deficiency.
17:39Basically, like a vampire
17:40The sun never sets
17:41Then came the American film Dracula in 1931
17:44And it proves the images of Dracula that we know today.
17:47The elegant, terrifying aristocrat
17:49In his black suit and with his Eastern European accent
17:51This form remained dominant for many decades.
17:53In the fifties and sixties, the British company
17:56She reintroduced Dracula with his colorful squirrel
17:58But this time it was violent
17:59We preserved his aristocratic appearance
18:01But we made it more violent
18:03Towards the end of the twentieth century, the vampire's character began to change.
18:05He's no longer just a monster
18:06We started to see him in a more human light.
18:081976, the writer
18:10American Anne Rice presented a narrative
18:12Interview with a brain sucker
18:14I applied because they have vampires.
18:16Feelings, conflicts, and morals
18:18He entered the republic, sympathized with the vampires, and saw them
18:21Musawi personalities and sometimes
18:22She remained a victim, not just a criminal.
18:24Then came films like Blade
18:26These things presented a good vampire
18:28He helps humans and fights vampires
18:30The look of the villains and the biggest attempt happened with
18:32The Twilight phenomenon in the final
18:34When the vampire is presented in a romantic way
18:36Edward Cullen's character is completely adolescent.
18:38It was very far from the shape
18:40The scary old man is a handsome young man who refuses
18:42He drinks human blood and loves humanity.
18:44Here, my dear vampire, remains a dream.
18:46The problem isn't officially with teenage girls.
18:48The problem is with you, the one who loves.
18:50This type, instead of being burned by the sun
18:52He kept shuffling in the sun
18:54After this long journey, my dear, we've changed.
18:56The vampire costume transformed from a scary monster
18:58For the cultural image now and we are sure
19:00He will continue, but why will he continue?
19:02Are there reasons beyond history and folklore?
19:04Did we come to love this character? In her book
19:06Our Vampires Ourselves explains
19:08Nina Orbeck: The vampire represents
19:10Our imagination is a mirror, a mirror in which we see
19:12Three fundamental aspects of our human nature
19:14Our fears, desires, and senses
19:16Let's begin with fear, my dear, with eternity.
19:18The vampire is born from the womb of fear.
19:20And we, my dear, have a strange relationship with fear.
19:22We hate it, but we are attracted to it at the same time.
19:24That's why we love watching horror movies.
19:26Although it scares us
19:27Zina explains transportation; Davids said in his book
19:30Horror literature and films are merely a reflection
19:32To address societal concerns and methods
19:34We used to empty our relationship with her and there was nothing
19:36A symbol of terror greater than a vampire
19:38A terrifying creature that embodies several fears
19:40All at once, the first and greatest of them is the fear of death.
19:42Vampire literally dead
19:44A corpse doesn't die if it walks among the living.
19:46His presence is a terrifying reminder to us
19:48There is death waiting for us all.
19:49The vampire bite also represents fear.
19:52From the disease and infection, the curse that he transmits
19:54He bit him, so the victim became like him.
19:55Vampires are like a plague that spreads from person to person.
19:58The second one also has a fear of loss
20:00The victim's will is under the spell of those who are under its influence.
20:02The vampire remains as if hypnotized
20:04A magnet that is involuntarily transformed
20:06And she loses control over herself, all fears
20:08The deep one, the death of Jumana
20:09The disease is a loss of control; all of this has led to oxidation.
20:12Perfect in the vampire character
20:14This explains why we find it both terrifying and entertaining.
20:16And it's attractive that we're watching movies while we're terrified.
20:18And at the same time we are happy because
20:20We face our fears safely
20:21This is deeply related to the analyst's theory.
20:24The famous Carlyleung on the shadow
20:26Or the Shadow Self, in which he says that we
20:28As humans, we have dark sides.
20:30Suppressed, full of fears
20:32Forbidden desires, all of this is what Nadarin is trying to do.
20:34And put it on a rug, we're all afraid
20:36And we acknowledge that it reappears in the form of monsters.
20:38And they're sucking our brains, making us blunt again, that's the second thing.
20:40Desire, my dear, the great hatchery
20:42How can a scary character like Mummy be...
20:44The brain can remain attractive and alluring
20:46According to critic Rosemani Jackson
20:48Horror stories often express desires
20:50Forbidden and repressed in society
20:51This is evident in Bram Stoker's novel Dracula.
20:54The one who is trying to make fun of the vampire character
20:55As a symbol of lust and sexual seduction
20:57Which Victorian society was trying to hide in any way possible
20:59Researcher Stephen Kimberney in his study
21:01Psychological Analysis of Vampire Myth
21:03He says that the scene of biting the neck and sucking blood
21:06It was always a symbol of a close relationship.
21:08Blindness and submission
21:09That's why this character has persisted to this day.
21:11As a symbol of toxic relationships or desires
21:13Those who are afraid, let's admit it
21:24The third and final point is immortality.
21:26This could be one of the most appealing ideas in vampire culture.
21:29In his book, he gave an example about reality.
21:31The author says that the dream of immortality is common to all peoples.
21:33From the first pharaohs to the alchemists in Europe
21:36Also, Catherine Ramsey in her article
21:38She says that the vampire character
21:40She presented us with the dream of immortality in a simple, symbolic way.
21:42Superhuman strength and eternal youth
21:44But at the same time, she highlighted the high price of immortality.
21:46Loneliness and isolation
21:48And if you are forced to sacrifice your humanity every day in order to live
21:51Modern vampire novels and films have posed the question directly.
21:54Is immortality worth losing your humanity for?
21:57The Vampires present us with a tough challenge
21:59Eternal strength and youth versus the loss of humanity and social cohesion
22:03That's why, my dear, the vampire legend is still going strong.
22:06Because it talks about us and our problems
22:08About the fear of death and the desires we hide
22:18Because we are actually rediscovering ourselves through it.
22:20These concerns can be expressed in more than one respectable way.
22:23Why is it that the vampire who tricked the girls understood that men are monsters and brainwash them?
22:27I am dear to your daughters who need to know you so they can know men well.
22:30His saying, O Abu Ahmad, his saying
22:32What's this, you too?
22:32What is this?
22:33If you look closely, my dear, you'll find that certain myths are similar across all cultures.
22:37Archaeologists have tried to explain this perplexing phenomenon in several ways.
22:40For example, you have the story of the flood from the story of Prophet Noah in the Middle East.
22:43The Epic of Gelgamesh in Babylon
22:45Reaching myths in China, India, and the Americas
22:48According to anthropologist James Fraser
22:50In more than 500 versions of the flood myth around the world
22:53The details may differ, but the essence is the same.
22:55A catastrophe of two surpluses destroys an old world to start a new one.
22:59Another legend is the hero's descent to the underworld.
23:01The story of heroes and their people descending to the land of the dead and returning to life exists among the Greeks.
23:05The costume of Orpheus, Ishtar among the Babylonians, and Isis among the Egyptians
23:09How did all these myths turn out to be so similar?
23:11The truth is, there are several interpretations.
23:13Carlyong believes that all humans have a common collective mind.
23:15Full of symbols and innate tales
23:17Aziz called them original models
23:20Architeps
23:21This means that civilizations can come up with the same stories without borrowing from each other.
23:24Because they share the same deep-seated human fears and desires
23:27Stories like the hero's journey to the afterlife are a reflection of our shared fear of the unknown.
23:31Our desire to defy oblivion
23:32Anthropologists like Claude Strauss and James Frazer have suggested that these stories may have been passed down from one civilization to another.
23:38Through trade, wars, or migration
23:40Humans faced a similar clash between humanity and nature.
23:43It's perfectly natural that similar myths would emerge.
23:45The truth, my dear, could be a combination of all of that.
23:48As the scholar of religions, Mircea Eliade, says
23:50Despite their differences, human beings are similar in their dreams, fears, and desires.
23:54The similarity between myths is proof that we as humans share a common essence.
23:58That's why we tell similar stories across the world.
24:00In conclusion, my dear, the legend of the vampire is a vivid example of the strange similarities in human stories.
24:05It's like a mirror to us.
24:06Ultimately, the vampire, in all its manifestations, is us, with all our fears and desires.
24:10As long as the fear of death, the forbidden desire, and the dream of immortality run in our veins
24:14The vampire will remain alive among us.
24:16And it moves in a new story from generation to generation
24:18That's all, my dear.
24:19Finally, and most importantly, let's not forget to look at the previous cases.
24:21You'll see the upcoming cases and forget to look at the sources.
24:22If we're on YouTube, we should subscribe to the channel.
24:24Do you know, my dear, what a plant-based vampire drinks?
24:26What's up, Abu Hamad?
24:26He drinks banger
24:27Okay, let me tell you, Abu Hamad, what position do I stand in?
24:28Yes, my dear, please go ahead.
24:29Do you know why?
24:30Does a vampire scratch?
24:31Why, my dear?
24:32Because he drank thin blood
24:59Translated by Nancy Qanqar