Directed by Ceejay Avilez and Diana Popick (according to IMDb, the film just credits Ceejay Avilez), this 2015 short is 13 minutes and has a film crew following a group of friends, one of whom happens to be a vampire called Elsa (Diana Popick, Verotika). The film follows them as Juan (Victor Canache), Elsa’s housemate, and Kim (Chelsea Rivera) plan an intervention to stop her drinking… blood.
When we watch their lives together it is clear that Elsa has some level of lack of impulse control – for instance feeding on a waitress (Tiffany Bock) who had come to take their order – she later feeds on the interventionalist (Paul Wheeler) who she declares must have been HIV positive as his blood is spicy and thus she couldn’t help herself. It is within this playing with tropes that the short does interesting things.
![]() |
| quick snack |
For instance, the HIV comment. There have been vampire films where the vampiric condition is an obvious simile for HIV and there have been instances where the vampire can catch a blood borne infection or HIV itself. I can’t immediately think of one where the vampire treats it as a spice. Equally the vampire has been used as a metaphor for both a drug and a drug user. In this case, whilst the friends believe her to be an addict, she retorts that she isn’t an addict, she actually needs it to live.
![]() |
| the waitress is the order |
As well as the needing blood to continue her existence we get some interesting throwaway lore. As well as being “allergic” to a stake through the heart and sunlight, these vampires are susceptible to zebras (and therefore she can’t go to a zoo). Another is a reveal that vampires came into existence at the point when Jesus rose from the grave – an interesting concept that amounts to a throwaway line (that also takes time to disparage a view of vampires through the lens of The Vampire Diaries and Twilight) but could stand expansion – the idea situating close to, but possibly different to, the origin in Dracula 2001. A final bit of lore is the ability to glamour a human.
Will the intervention work… Watch the short to find out. The imdb page is here.











































