Luror
Vampires fans = Necrophiliacs
Werewolf fans = Zoophilacs
I disagree. You have it very, very wrong. Yes, there are a lot of silly fangirls out there whose concept of vampires and werewolves is overly romantic, but us horror fans and monster movie fans love vampires and werewolves too, when they're in their proper element: the
horror story. Most fans of such creatures are aware that they're meant to be feared, not loved.
What's been done to vampires and werewolves and their fans is akin to being a little boy whose infant sister has taken one of your G.I. Joe figures and drawn all over it, chewed it all up, and dressed it in Barbie clothes. Many horror fans have given up on vampires and werewolves and are plain sick of them, but largely because of this out-of-character treatment that they've been given lately. Again, when they're in their proper element, there's something really cool there. That's not to say it's strictly a guy's genre or anything, but rather that monsters who are treated so over-romantically are not only betraying the core concept of them, but end up ruining it for the rest of us who know what monsters are supposed to be.
For werewolves, take a look at
An American Werewolf In London which is, bar none, the greatest werewolf film ever made. You also can't go wrong with the original
The Howling. For vampires, try some of the older stuff like
Nosferatu or
Dracula with Bela Lugosi. Christopher Lee's Dracula in the Hammer film series is probably the most famous image of the character, perfecting the style of vampire that Lugosi invented.