What’s scary about Blade 3?
David S. Goyer: There are some traditional scary moments in the film, definitely. We have a number of sequences in the dark, where characters are moving about and being menacing by creatures in the dark and there’s a great sequence with a blind character who’s trapped in an area with one of our bad guys. We can see what’s out there, but she doesn’t — so it’s sort of our little homage to Wait Until Dark. There’s another scary sequence with that same character’s daughter, who is only 6, who is hiding in an airshaft and the main baddie is looking for her and creeping about. So, we did have an opportunity to get in some sort of more traditional scary horror moments. And Blade battles Dracula in this one? He does battle Dracula, but he battles the Blade version of Dracula, if you will. Part of Blade’s success, is that we have deliberately toyed with people’s expectations of what vampires are and how they will react. So this Dracula is not your grandfather’s Dracula. He bears no resemblance